| Literature DB >> 30310825 |
N Pontius1, M Beye1, C Trabant1, R Mitzner1, F Sorgenfrei1, T Kachel1, M Wöstmann2, S Roling2, H Zacharias2, R Ivanov3, R Treusch3, M Buchholz4, P Metcalf5, C Schüßler-Langeheine1, A Föhlisch1.
Abstract
We present a general experimental concept for jitter-free pump and probe experiments at free electron lasers. By generating pump and probe pulse from one and the same X-ray pulse using an optical split-and-delay unit, we obtain a temporal resolution that is limited only by the X-ray pulse lengths. In a two-color X-ray pump and X-ray probe experiment with sub 70 fs temporal resolution, we selectively probe the response of orbital and charge degree of freedom in the prototypical functional oxide magnetite after photoexcitation. We find electronic order to be quenched on a time scale of (30 ± 30) fs and hence most likely faster than what is to be expected for any lattice dynamics. Our experimental result hints to the formation of a short lived transient state with decoupled electronic and lattice degree of freedom in magnetite. The excitation and relaxation mechanism for X-ray pumping is discussed within a simple model leading to the conclusion that within the first 10 fs the original photoexcitation decays into low-energy electronic excitations comparable to what is achieved by optical pump pulse excitation. Our findings show on which time scales dynamical decoupling of degrees of freedom in functional oxides can be expected and how to probe this selectively with soft X-ray pulses. Results can be expected to provide crucial information for theories for ultrafast behavior of materials and help to develop concepts for novel switching devices.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30310825 PMCID: PMC6158032 DOI: 10.1063/1.5042847
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Struct Dyn ISSN: 2329-7778 Impact factor: 2.920
FIG. 1.Two-color X-ray pump and probe scheme at the BL2-beamline at FLASH. The FEL undulator generates fs X-ray pulses at fundamental (177 eV) and third harmonics (530 eV) photon energies. The split-and-delay unit serves to separate pump (fundamental) and probe (third harmonics) pulses. The graph gives the X-ray pulse energies (number of photons on the right hand scale) of pump (red dashed line) and probe pulses (blue solid) at any position of the setup. The solid red and the dashed blue lines are the pulse energies of fundamental and third harmonics photons in the respective other branches which are negligible for excitation and detection, respectively. The beam path contains beamline mirrors M1–M3, Aluminum filters F1–F3, and beam splitting mirrors BS1 and BS2 of the split-and-delay unit.
FIG. 2.Time resolved resonant X-ray diffraction by two-color X-ray pump and probe: (a) Time resolved resonant X-ray diffraction from the (0 0 ) superstructure peak of magnetite after excitation by 177 eV photons. Before excitation, magnetite has been prepared in the low temperature, electronically ordered, insulating phase. The drop of the diffraction signal indicates a partial loss of electronic order. To estimate the decay time within the uncertainty range of the temporal resolution as determined from the pulse-length measurement (see Experimental Details), the data have been fitted by single exponentials by considering the range of possible temporal resolution (see the text). Assuming 10 fs resolution yields the dashed fit curve with a decay time τ = (28 ± 20) fs; the solid curve refers to an assumed temporal resolution of 70 fs resulting in τ = (30 ± 30) fs.
FIG. 3.(a) Relative change of the (0 0 ) superstructure Bragg peak intensity for delays >100 fs as a function of fundamental pulse energy as measured by the gas monitor detectors. A linear dependence is observed. (b) Initial sub-shell photoexcitation in magnetite by photoabsorption of 177 eV photons. The excitation ratio of the particular electrons considers the individual atomic cross-sections, occupation number, as well as the stoichiometry. “e” and “h” correspond to the electron and hole energies, respectively, associated with the particular excitation process. (c) Ultrafast electron relaxation through inelastic scattering processes (impact ionization). The red symbols mark the excited electron energy after the 1st, 2nd, etc., inelastic scattering event by assuming an average energy loss of ≈5 eV per event.