51 research outputs found
Multiplex movie of concerted rotation of molecules on a 2D material
Function is dynamic and originates at atomic interfaces. Combining the
degrees of freedom of molecules with the peculiar properties of 2D quantum
materials can create novel functionality. Here, we report the manipulation and
ultrafast imaging of a unidirectional gearing motion in molecules on a 2D
quantum material. To visualize and disentangle the intertwined structural and
electronic dynamics of such a hybrid interface, we record a 'full molecular
movie' by imaging the atomic positions, the evolution of the molecular orbital
wavefunctions and the modification of electronic states of the substrate. In a
multimodal investigation in a single setup, we disentangle dynamics in valence
and core electrons of both the molecule and the surface with femtosecond and
sub-{\aa}ngstr\"om precision. The ultrafast rotational motion is fueled by the
transfer of hot holes into the molecules that results in 'supercharging' of the
film. As hot carriers move through the interface, we track a transient
modification of the frontier molecular orbitals and observe a chiral symmetry
breaking associated with local structural rearrangements. Our calculations show
that the 'supercharging' changes the interfacial potential energy landscape and
triggers the gearing motion. The experiment offers all-in-one imaging of the
electronic, molecular orbital, chemical and structural dynamics during the flow
of charge and energy across the hybrid interface. Our approach provides
detailed dynamical information on the mechanism underlying surface-adsorbed
molecular gears and enables tailoring novel functionalities in hybrid active
matter.Comment: 19 pages, 6 figure
Suppression of the vacuum space-charge effect in fs-photoemission by a retarding electrostatic front lens
The performance of time-resolved photoemission experiments at fs-pulsed photon sources is ultimately limited by the e–e Coulomb interaction, downgrading energy and momentum resolution. Here, we present an approach to effectively suppress space-charge artifacts in momentum microscopes and photoemission microscopes. A retarding electrostatic field generated by a special objective lens repels slow electrons, retaining the k-image of the fast photoelectrons. The suppression of space-charge effects scales with the ratio of the photoelectron velocities of fast and slow electrons. Fields in the range from −20 to −1100 V/mm for E = 100 eV to 4 keV direct secondaries and pump-induced slow electrons back to the sample surface. Ray tracing simulations reveal that this happens within the first 40 to 3 μm above the sample surface for E = 100 eV to 4 keV. An optimized front-lens design allows switching between the conventional accelerating and the new retarding mode. Time-resolved experiments at E = 107 eV using fs extreme ultraviolet probe pulses from the free-electron laser FLASH reveal that the width of the Fermi edge increases by just 30 meV at an incident pump fluence of 22 mJ/cm (retarding field −21 V/mm). For an accelerating field of +2 kV/mm and a pump fluence of only 5 mJ/cm, it increases by 0.5 eV (pump wavelength 1030 nm). At the given conditions, the suppression mode permits increasing the slow-electron yield by three to four orders of magnitude. The feasibility of the method at high energies is demonstrated without a pump beam at E = 3830 eV using hard x rays from the storage ring PETRA III. The approach opens up a previously inaccessible regime of pump fluences for photoemission experiments
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