X-ray scattering is one of the primary tools to determine crystallographic
configuration with atomic accuracy. However, the measurement of ultrafast
structural dynamics in monolayer crystals remains a long-standing challenge due
to a significant reduction of diffraction volume and complexity of data
analysis, prohibiting the application of ultrafast x-ray scattering to study
nonequilibrium structural properties at the two-dimensional limit. Here, we
demonstrate femtosecond surface x-ray diffraction in combination with
crystallographic model-refinement calculations to quantify the ultrafast
structural dynamics of monolayer WSe2 crystals supported on a substrate. We
found the absorbed optical photon energy is preferably coupled to the in-plane
lattice vibrations within 2 picoseconds while the out-of-plane lattice
vibration amplitude remains unchanged during the first 10 picoseconds. The
model-assisted fitting suggests an asymmetric intralayer spacing change upon
excitation. The observed nonequilibrium anisotropic structural dynamics in
two-dimensional materials agrees with first-principles nonadiabatic modeling in
both real and momentum space, marking the distinct structural dynamics of
monolayer crystals from their bulk counterparts. The demonstrated methods
unlock the benefit of surface sensitive x-ray scattering to quantitatively
measure ultrafast structural dynamics in atomically thin materials and across
interfaces