9 research outputs found
Bright High-Order Harmonic Generation around 30 nm Using Hundred-Terawatt-Level Laser System for Seeding Full Coherent XFEL
In the past few years, the laser wakefield acceleration (LWFA) electron is a hot topic. One of its applications is to produce soft X-ray free-electron laser (XFEL). During this process, high harmonic generation (HHG) is a potential seed. To decrease the timing jitter between LWFA and HHG, it is better for them to come from the same laser source. We have experimentally investigated bright high-order harmonic generation with a 200-terawatt (TW)/1-Hz Ti: Sapphire laser system. By using the loosely focused method and optimizing the phase-matching conditions, we have obtained bright high-order harmonics around 30 nm. Output energy of the 29th harmonic (27.6 nm) reaches as high as 100 nJ per pulse, and the harmonic beam divergence is estimated to be 0.3 mrad in a full width at half maximum (FWHM). Although the hundred-TW-level laser system has the problems of poor beam quality and shot-to-shot energy fluctuation for HHG, the generated soft X-ray (~30 nm) sources can also have good stability by carefully optimizing the laser system
Recommended from our members
Epitaxial Ferroelectric Hf0.5 Zr0.5 O2 with Metallic Pyrochlore Oxide Electrodes.
The synthesis of fully epitaxial ferroelectric Hf0.5 Zr0.5 O2 (HZO) thin films through the use of a conducting pyrochlore oxide electrode that acts as a structural and chemical template is reported. Such pyrochlores, exemplified by Pb2 Ir2 O7 (PIO) and Bi2 Ru2 O7 (BRO), exhibit metallic conductivity with room-temperature resistivity of <1 mΩ cm and are closely lattice matched to yttria-stabilized zirconia substrates as well as the HZO layers grown on top of them. Evidence for epitaxy and domain formation is established with X-ray diffraction and scanning transmission electron microscopy, which show that the c-axis of the HZO film is normal to the substrate surface. The emergence of the non-polar-monoclinic phase from the polar-orthorhombic phase is observed when the HZO film thickness is ≥≈30 nm. Thermodynamic analyses reveal the role of epitaxial strain and surface energy in stabilizing the polar phase as well as its coexistence with the non-polar-monoclinic phase as a function of film thickness
Epitaxial Ferroelectric Hf 0.5
The synthesis of fully epitaxial ferroelectric Hf0.5 Zr0.5 O2 (HZO) thin films through the use of a conducting pyrochlore oxide electrode that acts as a structural and chemical template is reported. Such pyrochlores, exemplified by Pb2 Ir2 O7 (PIO) and Bi2 Ru2 O7 (BRO), exhibit metallic conductivity with room-temperature resistivity of <1 mΩ cm and are closely lattice matched to yttria-stabilized zirconia substrates as well as the HZO layers grown on top of them. Evidence for epitaxy and domain formation is established with X-ray diffraction and scanning transmission electron microscopy, which show that the c-axis of the HZO film is normal to the substrate surface. The emergence of the non-polar-monoclinic phase from the polar-orthorhombic phase is observed when the HZO film thickness is ≥≈30 nm. Thermodynamic analyses reveal the role of epitaxial strain and surface energy in stabilizing the polar phase as well as its coexistence with the non-polar-monoclinic phase as a function of film thickness
Recommended from our members
Epitaxial Ferroelectric Hf0.5 Zr0.5 O2 with Metallic Pyrochlore Oxide Electrodes.
The synthesis of fully epitaxial ferroelectric Hf0.5 Zr0.5 O2 (HZO) thin films through the use of a conducting pyrochlore oxide electrode that acts as a structural and chemical template is reported. Such pyrochlores, exemplified by Pb2 Ir2 O7 (PIO) and Bi2 Ru2 O7 (BRO), exhibit metallic conductivity with room-temperature resistivity of <1 mΩ cm and are closely lattice matched to yttria-stabilized zirconia substrates as well as the HZO layers grown on top of them. Evidence for epitaxy and domain formation is established with X-ray diffraction and scanning transmission electron microscopy, which show that the c-axis of the HZO film is normal to the substrate surface. The emergence of the non-polar-monoclinic phase from the polar-orthorhombic phase is observed when the HZO film thickness is ≥≈30 nm. Thermodynamic analyses reveal the role of epitaxial strain and surface energy in stabilizing the polar phase as well as its coexistence with the non-polar-monoclinic phase as a function of film thickness
Recommended from our members
Epitaxial Ferroelectric Hf0.5 Zr0.5 O2 with Metallic Pyrochlore Oxide Electrodes.
Adv. Mater. 2021, 33, 2006089 DOI: 10.1002/adma.202006089 Aviram Bhalla-Levine is hereby added as an author of the article. Avi was an undergraduate student who did some of the piezoresponse force microscopy (PFM) experiments in the work. He left the group in the summer of 2019. When preparing the figures for the submission, the authors overlooked the fact that Avi had acquired that data. To give proper credit, they are added as an author of the paper as given above in the correction author list. The author name is associated with affiliation 1: Z. Zhang, A. Bhalla-Levine, Dr. L. Xie, Dr. M. Kumari, Dr. S. Das, Z. Leng, Prof. L. W. Martin, Prof. R. Ramesh Department of Materials Science and Engineering University of California Berkeley, CA 94720, USA E-mail: [email protected]