51 research outputs found
Real-time observation of a coherent lattice transformation into a high-symmetry phase
Excursions far from their equilibrium structures can bring crystalline solids
through collective transformations including transitions into new phases that
may be transient or long-lived. Direct spectroscopic observation of
far-from-equilibrium rearrangements provides fundamental mechanistic insight
into chemical and structural transformations, and a potential route to
practical applications, including ultrafast optical control over material
structure and properties. However, in many cases photoinduced transitions are
irreversible or only slowly reversible, or the light fluence required exceeds
material damage thresholds. This precludes conventional ultrafast spectroscopy
in which optical excitation and probe pulses irradiate the sample many times,
each measurement providing information about the sample response at just one
probe delay time following excitation, with each measurement at a high
repetition rate and with the sample fully recovering its initial state in
between measurements. Using a single-shot, real-time measurement method, we
were able to observe the photoinduced phase transition from the semimetallic,
low-symmetry phase of crystalline bismuth into a high-symmetry phase whose
existence at high electronic excitation densities was predicted based on
earlier measurements at moderate excitation densities below the damage
threshold. Our observations indicate that coherent lattice vibrational motion
launched upon photoexcitation with an incident fluence above 10 mJ/cm2 in bulk
bismuth brings the lattice structure directly into the high-symmetry
configuration for tens of picoseconds, after which carrier relaxation and
diffusion restore the equilibrium lattice configuration.Comment: 22 pages, 4 figure
Coherent Phonons in Antimony: an Undergraduate Physical Chemistry Solid-State Ultrafast Laser Spectroscopy Experiment
Ultrafast laser pump-probe spectroscopy is an important and growing field of
physical chemistry that allows the measurement of chemical dynamics on their
natural timescales, but undergraduate laboratory courses lack examples of such
spectroscopy and the interpretation of the dynamics that occur. Here we develop
and implement an ultrafast pump-probe spectroscopy experiment for the
undergraduate physical chemistry laboratory course at the University of
California Berkeley. The goal of the experiment is to expose students to
concepts in solid-state chemistry and ultrafast spectroscopy via classic
coherent phonon dynamics principles developed by researchers over multiple
decades. The experiment utilizes a modern high-repetition rate 800 nm
femtosecond Ti:Sapphire laser, split pulses with a variable time delay, and
sensitive detection of transient reflectivity signals. The experiment involves
minimal intervention from students and is therefore easy and safe to implement
in the laboratory. Students first perform an intensity autocorrelation
measurement on the femtosecond laser pulses to obtain their temporal duration.
Then, students measure the pump-probe reflectivity of a single-crystal antimony
sample to determine the period of coherent phonon oscillations initiated by an
ultrafast pulse excitation, which is analyzed by fitting to a sine wave. Due to
the disruption of in-person instruction caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, during
those semesters students were provided the data they would have obtained during
the experiment to analyze at home. Evaluation of student written reports
reveals that the learning goals were met, and that students gained an
appreciation for the field of ultrafast laser-induced chemistry
Layer-Resolved Ultrafast XUV Measurement of Hole Transport in a Ni-TiO2-Si Photoanode
Metal-oxide-semiconductor junctions are central to most electronic and
optoelectronic devices. Here, the element-specificity of broadband extreme
ultraviolet (XUV) ultrafast pulses is used to measure the charge transport and
recombination kinetics in each layer of a Ni-TiO2-Si junction. After
photoexcitation of silicon, holes are inferred to transport from Si to Ni
ballistically in ~100 fs, resulting in spectral shifts in the Ni M2,3 XUV edge
that are characteristic of holes and the absence of holes initially in TiO2.
Meanwhile, the electrons are observed to remain on Si. After picoseconds, the
transient hole population on Ni is observed to back-diffuse through the TiO2,
shifting the Ti spectrum to higher oxidation state, followed by electron-hole
recombination at the Si-TiO2 interface and in the Si bulk. Electrical
properties, such as the hole diffusion constant in TiO2 and the initial hole
mobility in Si, are fit from these transient spectra and match well with values
reported previously
Layer-resolved ultrafast extreme ultraviolet measurement of hole transport in a Ni-TiO₂-Si photoanode
Metal oxide semiconductor junctions are central to most electronic and optoelectronic devices, but ultrafast measurements of carrier transport have been limited to device-average measurements. Here, charge transport and recombination kinetics in each layer of a Ni-TiO₂-Si junction is measured using the element specificity of broadband extreme ultraviolet (XUV) ultrafast pulses. After silicon photoexcitation, holes are inferred to transport from Si to Ni ballistically in ~100 fs, resulting in characteristic spectral shifts in the XUV edges. Meanwhile, the electrons remain on Si. After picoseconds, the transient hole population on Ni is observed to back-diffuse through the TiO₂, shifting the Ti spectrum to a higher oxidation state, followed by electron-hole recombination at the Si-TiO₂ interface and in the Si bulk. Electrical properties, such as the hole diffusion constant in TiO₂ and the initial hole mobility in Si, are fit from these transient spectra and match well with values reported previously
Photoexcited Small Polaron Formation in Goethite (α-FeOOH) Nanorods Probed by Transient Extreme Ultraviolet Spectroscopy
Small polaron formation limits the mobility and lifetimes of photoexcited carriers in metal oxides. As the ligand field strength increases, the carrier mobility decreases, but the effect on the photoexcited small polaron formation is still unknown. Extreme ultraviolet transient absorption spectroscopy is employed to measure small polaron formation rates and probabilities in goethite (α-FeOOH) crystalline nanorods at pump photon energies from 2.2 to 3.1 eV. The measured polaron formation time increases with excitation photon energy from 70 ± 10 fs at 2.2 eV to 350 ± 30 fs at 2.6 eV, whereas the polaron formation probability (85 ± 10%) remains constant. By comparison to hematite (α-Fe_2O_3), an oxide analogue, the role of ligand composition and metal center density in small polaron formation time is discussed. This work suggests that incorporating small changes in ligands and crystal structure could enable the control of photoexcited small polaron formation in metal oxides
Electron Thermalization and Relaxation in Laser-Heated Nickel by Few-Femtosecond Core-Level Transient Absorption Spectroscopy
Direct measurements of photoexcited carrier dynamics in nickel are made using
few-femtosecond extreme ultraviolet (XUV) transient absorption spectroscopy at
the nickel M edge. It is observed that the core-level absorption
lineshape of photoexcited nickel can be described by a Gaussian broadening
() and a red shift () of the ground state absorption
spectrum. Theory predicts, and the experimental results verify that after
initial rapid carrier thermalization, the electron temperature increase
() is linearly proportional to the Gaussian broadening factor
, providing quantitative real-time tracking of the relaxation of the
electron temperature. Measurements reveal an electron cooling time for 50 nm
thick polycrystalline nickel films of 64080 fs. With hot thermalized
carriers, the spectral red shift exhibits a power-law relationship with the
change in electron temperature of . Rapid
electron thermalization via carrier-carrier scattering accompanies and follows
the nominal 4 fs photoexcitation pulse until the carriers reach a quasi-thermal
equilibrium. Entwined with a <6 fs instrument response function, carrier
thermalization times ranging from 34 fs to 13 fs are estimated from
experimental data acquired at different pump fluences and it is observed that
the electron thermalization time decreases with increasing pump fluence. The
study provides an initial example of measuring electron temperature and
thermalization in metals in real time with XUV light, and it lays a foundation
for further investigation of photoinduced phase transitions and carrier
transport in metals with core-level absorption spectroscopy.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figure
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