34 research outputs found
Ultrafast Phonon-Diffuse Scattering as a Tool for Observing Chiral Phonons in Monolayer Hexagonal Lattices
At the 2D limit, hexagonal systems such as monolayer transition metal
dichalcogenides (TMDs) and graphene exhibit unique coupled spin and
momentum-valley physics (valley pseudospin) owing to broken spatial inversion
symmetry and strong spin-orbit coupling. Circularly polarized light provides
the means for pseudospin-selective excitation of excitons (or electrons and
holes) and can yield momentum-valley polarized populations of carriers that are
the subject of proposed valleytronic applications. The chirality of these
excited carriers have important consequences for the available
relaxation/scattering pathways, which must conserve (pseudo)angular momentum as
well as energy. One available relaxation channel that satisfies these
constraints is coupling to chiral phonons. Here we show that chiral
carrier-phonon coupling following valley-polarized photoexcitation is expected
to leads to a strongly valley-polarized chiral phonon distribution that is
directly measurable using ultrafast phonon-diffuse scattering techniques. Using
ab-initio calculations we show how the dynamic phonon occupations and valley
anisotropy determined by nonequilibrium observations can provide a new window
on the physical processes that drive carrier valley-depolarization in monolayer
TMDs
Solving the Jitter Problem in Microwave Compressed Ultrafast Electron Diffraction Instruments: Robust Sub-50 fs Cavity-Laser Phase Stabilization
We demonstrate the compression of electron pulses in a high-brightness
ultrafast electron diffraction (UED) instrument using phase-locked microwave
signals directly generated from a mode-locked femtosecond oscillator.
Additionally, a continuous-wave phase stabilization system that accurately
corrects for phase fluctuations arising in the compression cavity from both
power amplification and thermal drift induced detuning was designed and
implemented. An improvement in the microwave timing stability from 100 fs to 5
fs RMS is measured electronically and the long-term arrival time stability
(10 hours) of the electron pulses improves to below our measurement
resolution of 50 fs. These results demonstrate sub-relativistic ultrafast
electron diffraction with compressed pulses that is no longer limited by
laser-microwave synchronization.Comment: Accepted for publication in Structural Dynamic
Ultrafast Electron Diffuse Scattering as a Tool for Studying Phonon Transport: Phonon Hydrodynamics and Second Sound Oscillations
Hydrodynamic phonon transport phenomena, like second sound, have been
observed in liquid Helium temperatures more than 50 years ago. More recently
second sound has been observed in graphite at over 200\,K using transient
thermal grating techniques. In this work we explore the signatures of second
sound in ultrafast electron diffuse scattering (UEDS) patterns. We use density
functional theory and solve the Boltzmann transport equation to determine
time-resolved non-equilibrium phonon populations and subsequently calculate
one-phonon structure factors and diffuse scattering patterns to simulate
experimental data covering the regimes of ballistic, diffusive, and
hydrodynamic phonon transport. For systems like graphite, UEDS is capable of
extracting time-dependent phonon occupancies across the entire Brillouin zone
and ultimately lead to a more fundamental understanding of the hydrodynamic
phonon transport regime.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
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Tracking ultrafast solid-state dynamics using high harmonic spectroscopy
WWe establish time-resolved high harmonic generation (tr-HHG) as a powerful spectroscopy method for tracking photoinduced dynamics in strongly correlated materials through a detailed investigation of the insulator-to-metal phase transitions in vanadium dioxide. We benchmark the technique by comparing our measurements to established momentum-resolved ultrafast electron diffraction, and theoretical density functional calculations. Tr-HHG allows distinguishing of individual dynamic channels, including a transition to a thermodynamically hidden phase. In addition, the HHG yield is shown to be modulated at a frequency characteristic of a coherent phonon of the equilibrium monoclinic phase over a wide range of excitation fluences. These results demonstrate that tr-HHG is capable of tracking complex dynamics in solids through its sensitivity to the band structure