586 research outputs found
Diffractive imaging of dissociation and ground state dynamics in a complex molecule
We have investigated the structural dynamics in photoexcited
1,2-diiodotetrafluoroethane molecules (C2F4I2) in the gas phase experimentally
using ultrafast electron diffraction and theoretically using FOMO-CASCI excited
state dynamics simulations. The molecules are excited by an ultra-violet
femtosecond laser pulse to a state characterized by a transition from the
iodine 5p orbital to a mixed 5p|| hole and CF2 antibonding orbital, which
results in the cleavage of one of the carbon-iodine bonds. We have observed,
with sub-Angstrom resolution, the motion of the nuclear wavepacket of the
dissociating iodine atom followed by coherent vibrations in the electronic
ground state of the C2F4I radical. The radical reaches a stable classical
(non-bridged) structure in less than 200 fs.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figure
Carrier-Specific Femtosecond XUV Transient Absorption of PbI2 Reveals Ultrafast Nonradiative Recombination
Femtosecond carrier recombination in PbI2 is measured using tabletop
high-harmonic extreme ultraviolet (XUV) transient absorption spectroscopy and
ultrafast electron diffraction. XUV absorption from 45 eV to 62 eV measures
transitions from the iodine 4d core level to the conduction band density of
states. Photoexcitation at 400 nm creates separate and distinct transient
absorption signals for holes and electrons, separated in energy by the 2.4 eV
band gap of the semiconductor. The shape of the conduction band and therefore
the XUV absorption spectrum is temperature dependent, and nonradiative
recombination converts the initial electronic excitation to thermal excitation
within picoseconds. Ultrafast electron diffraction (UED) is used to measure the
lattice temperature and confirm the recombination mechanism. The XUV and UED
results support a 2nd-order recombination model with a rate constant of
2.5x10-9 cm3/s
Ultrafast manipulation of mirror domain walls in a charge density wave
Domain walls (DWs) are singularities in an ordered medium that often host
exotic phenomena such as charge ordering, insulator-metal transition, or
superconductivity. The ability to locally write and erase DWs is highly
desirable, as it allows one to design material functionality by patterning DWs
in specific configurations. We demonstrate such capability at room temperature
in a charge density wave (CDW), a macroscopic condensate of electrons and
phonons, in ultrathin 1T-TaS. A single femtosecond light pulse is shown to
locally inject or remove mirror DWs in the CDW condensate, with probabilities
tunable by pulse energy and temperature. Using time-resolved electron
diffraction, we are able to simultaneously track anti-synchronized CDW
amplitude oscillations from both the lattice and the condensate, where
photo-injected DWs lead to a red-shifted frequency. Our demonstration of
reversible DW manipulation may pave new ways for engineering correlated
material systems with light
Light-induced picosecond rotational disordering of the inorganic sublattice in hybrid perovskites.
Femtosecond resolution electron scattering techniques are applied to resolve the first atomic-scale steps following absorption of a photon in the prototypical hybrid perovskite methylammonium lead iodide. Following above-gap photoexcitation, we directly resolve the transfer of energy from hot carriers to the lattice by recording changes in the mean square atomic displacements on 10-ps time scales. Measurements of the time-dependent pair distribution function show an unexpected broadening of the iodine-iodine correlation function while preserving the Pb-I distance. This indicates the formation of a rotationally disordered halide octahedral structure developing on picosecond time scales. This work shows the important role of light-induced structural deformations within the inorganic sublattice in elucidating the unique optoelectronic functionality exhibited by hybrid perovskites and provides new understanding of hot carrier-lattice interactions, which fundamentally determine solar cell efficiencies
Light-Induced Charge Density Wave in LaTe
When electrons in a solid are excited with light, they can alter the free
energy landscape and access phases of matter that are beyond reach in thermal
equilibrium. This accessibility becomes of vast importance in the presence of
phase competition, when one state of matter is preferred over another by only a
small energy scale that, in principle, is surmountable by light. Here, we study
a layered compound, LaTe, where a small in-plane (a-c plane) lattice
anisotropy results in a unidirectional charge density wave (CDW) along the
c-axis. Using ultrafast electron diffraction, we find that after
photoexcitation, the CDW along the c-axis is weakened and subsequently, a
different competing CDW along the a-axis emerges. The timescales characterizing
the relaxation of this new CDW and the reestablishment of the original CDW are
nearly identical, which points towards a strong competition between the two
orders. The new density wave represents a transient non-equilibrium phase of
matter with no equilibrium counterpart, and this study thus provides a
framework for unleashing similar states of matter that are "trapped" under
equilibrium conditions
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