30 research outputs found

    Luminescence ultraviolette et dynamiques excitoniques dans l’oxyde de zinc massif et nano-structuré

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    This thesis presents the work carried out at CELIA about ultraviolet luminescence and exciton dynamics in massive and nano-structured zinc oxide (ZnO). Measurements were carried out under controlled experimental conditions (temperature, excitation fluence), according to different excitation photon energies.We measured emission spectra under UV photon excitation (4.66 eV), and 3 IR photons (1.55 eV), and suggested a sequential exciton formation mechanism (with simulations), especially for DX excitons. We found a nanosecond lifetime for DX in both cases, in disagreement with most of the studies published in the literature. Relaxation dynamics of free and bound excitons are linked by the FX trapping process on donor defect and the DX thermal detrapping.Under VUV excitation (20-50 eV), surface effects and strong local excitation density greatly accelerate the relaxation of excitons. Under X excitation (1 keV), good conditions for the formation of DX seems to be close under excitation at 1.55 and 950 eV.The presence of core 2p band of zinc modifies the relaxation dynamics of excitons by the multiplication of local high density excitations zones and the change of the elementary excitations distribution. We have also conducted measurements on nano-particles. The significant surface effects induced by the small size of these system lead to a sharp acceleration of kinetics, masking the intrinsic exciton relaxation process.Cette thèse présente les travaux effectués au CELIA sur la luminescence ultraviolette et les dynamiques excitoniques dans l’oxyde de zinc (ZnO) sous forme massive et nano-structurée. Les mesures ont été effectuées en conditions expérimentales contrôlées (température, fluence d’excitation), pour différentes énergies de photon excitateur. Nous avons mesuré les spectres d’émission sous excitation à un photon UV (4,66 eV), ainsi que à 3 photons IR (1,55 eV), et proposé un schéma séquentiel de formation des excitons (avec simulations), en particulier pour les excitons DX. Nous avons obtenu une durée de vie nanoseconde de DX dans les deux cas, en désaccord avec la majorité des études publiées dans la littérature

    Time Resolved Investigation of High Repetition Rate Gas Jet Target For High Harmonic Generation

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    High repetition rate gas targets constitute an essential component in intense laser matter interaction studies. The technology becomes challenging as the repetition rate approaches kHz regime. In this regime, cantilever based gas valves are employed, which can open and close in tens of microseconds, resulting in a unique kind of gas characteristics in both spatial and temporal domain. Here we characterize piezo cantilever based kHz pulsed gas valves in the low density regime, where it provides sufficient peak gas density for High Harmonic Generation while releasing significantly less amount of gas reducing the vacuum load within the interaction chamber, suitable for high vacuum applications. In order to obtain reliable information of the gas density in the target jet space-time resolved characterization is performed. The gas jet system is validated by conducting interferometric gas density estimations and high harmonic generation measurements at the Extreme Light Infrastructure Attosecond Light Pulse Source (ELI ALPS) facility. Our results demonstrate that while employing such targets for optimal high harmonic generation, the high intensity interaction should be confined to a suitable time window, after the cantilever opening. The measured gas density evolution correlates well with the integrated high harmonic flux and state of the art 3D simulation results, establishing the importance of such metrology.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure

    Laser-induced inner-shell excitations through direct electron re-collision versus indirect collision

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    The dynamics and the decay processes of inner-shell excited atoms are of great interest in physics, chemistry, biology, and technology. The highly excited state decays very quickly through different channels, both radiative and non-radiative. It is therefore a long-standing goal to study such dynamics directly in the time domain. Using few-cycle infrared laser pulses, we investigated the excitation and ionization of inner-shell electrons through laser-induced electron re-collision with the original parent ions and measured the dependence of the emitted x-ray spectra on the intensity and ellipticity of the driving laser. These directly re-colliding electrons can be used as the initiating pump step in pump/probe experiments for studying core-hole dynamics at their natural temporal scale. In our experiment we found that the dependence of the x-ray emission spectrum on the laser intensity and polarization state varies distinctly for the two kinds of atomic systems. Relying on our data and numerical simulations, we explain this behavior by the presence of different excitation mechanisms that are contributing in different ratios to the respective overall x-ray emission yields. Direct re-collision excitation competes with indirect collisions with neighboring atoms by electrons having "drifted away" from the original parent ion. (C) 2020 Optical Society of America under the terms of the OSA Open Access Publishing Agreemen

    Attosecond pulse shaping using a seeded free-electron laser

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    Attosecond pulses are central to the investigation of valence- and core-electron dynamics on their natural timescales1–3. The reproducible generation and characterization of attosecond waveforms has been demonstrated so far only through the process of high-order harmonic generation4–7. Several methods for shaping attosecond waveforms have been proposed, including the use of metallic filters8,9, multilayer mirrors10 and manipulation of the driving field11. However, none of these approaches allows the flexible manipulation of the temporal characteristics of the attosecond waveforms, and they suffer from the low conversion efficiency of the high-order harmonic generation process. Free-electron lasers, by contrast, deliver femtosecond, extreme-ultraviolet and X-ray pulses with energies ranging from tens of microjoules to a few millijoules12,13. Recent experiments have shown that they can generate subfemtosecond spikes, but with temporal characteristics that change shot-to-shot14–16. Here we report reproducible generation of high-energy (microjoule level) attosecond waveforms using a seeded free-electron laser17. We demonstrate amplitude and phase manipulation of the harmonic components of an attosecond pulse train in combination with an approach for its temporal reconstruction. The results presented here open the way to performing attosecond time-resolved experiments with free-electron lasers

    Complex attosecond waveform synthesis at fel fermi

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    Free-electron lasers (FELs) can produce radiation in the short wavelength range extending from the extreme ultraviolet (XUV) to the X-rays with a few to a few tens of femtoseconds pulse duration. These facilities have enabled significant breakthroughs in the field of atomic, molecular, and optical physics, implementing different schemes based on two-color photoionization mechanisms. In this article, we present the generation of attosecond pulse trains (APTs) at the seeded FEL FERMI using the beating of multiple phase-locked harmonics. We demonstrate the complex attosecond waveform shaping of the generated APTs, exploiting the ability to manipulate independently the amplitudes and the phases of the harmonics. The described generalized attosecond waveform synthesis technique with an arbitrary number of phase-locked harmonics will allow the generation of sub-100 as pulses with programmable electric fields
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