44 results on '"Kraus PM"'
Search Results
2. Retrieval of the complex-valued refractive index of germanium near the M4,5 absorption edge
- Author
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Kaplan, CJ, Kraus, PM, Gullikson, EM, Borja, LJ, Cushing, SK, Zürch, M, Chang, HT, Neumark, DM, and Leone, SR
- Subjects
Optical Physics ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Applied Mathematics ,Optics - Abstract
The complex-valued index of refraction of germanium in the extreme ultraviolet (XUV) is measured by multiangle reflectance of synchrotron radiation. The resulting index of refraction is higher resolution than previously measured values. It reveals new structures attributed to transitions from the 3d-core orbitals to the Σc5,2 and the Xc5,2 conduction bands. Additionally, it is shown that the problem of total external reflection, which renders multi-angle reflectance measurements insensitive to the complex-valued refractive index at grazing incidence, can be overcome by employing measurements at angles of incidence away from the critical angle.
- Published
- 2019
3. The ultrafast X-ray spectroscopic revolution in chemical dynamics
- Author
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Kraus, PM, Zürch, M, Cushing, SK, Neumark, DM, and Leone, SR
- Abstract
The past two decades have seen rapid developments in short-pulse X-ray sources, which have enabled the study of nuclear and electronic dynamics by ultrafast X-ray spectroscopies with unprecedented time resolution ranging from nanoseconds to attoseconds. In this Perspective, we discuss some of the major achievements in the study of nuclear and electronic dynamics with X-ray pulses produced by high-harmonic, free-electron-laser and synchrotron sources. The particular dynamic processes probed by X-ray radiation highlighted in this Perspective are electronic coherences on attosecond to femtosecond timescales, chemical reactions, such as dissociations, and pericyclic ring-openings, spin-crossover dynamics, ligand-exchange dynamics and structural deformations in excited states. X-ray spectroscopic probing of chemical dynamics holds great promise for the future owing to the ongoing developments of new spectroscopies, such as four-wave mixing, and the continuous improvements in emerging laboratory-based, high-harmonic sources and large-scale, facility-based, free-electron lasers.
- Published
- 2018
4. Femtosecond tracking of carrier relaxation in germanium with extreme ultraviolet transient reflectivity
- Author
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Kaplan, CJ, Kraus, PM, Ross, AD, Zürch, M, Cushing, SK, Jager, MF, Chang, HT, Gullikson, EM, Neumark, DM, and Leone, SR
- Abstract
Extreme ultraviolet (XUV) transient reflectivity around the germanium M4,5 edge (3d core-level to valence transition) at 30 eV is advanced to obtain the transient dielectric function of crystalline germanium [100] on femtosecond to picosecond time scales following photoexcitation by broadband visible-to-infrared (VIS/NIR) pulses. By fitting the transient dielectric function, carrier-phonon induced relaxations are extracted for the excited carrier distribution. The measurements reveal a hot electron relaxation rate of 3.2±0.2ps attributed to the X-L intervalley scattering and a hot hole relaxation rate of 600±300fs ascribed to intravalley scattering within the heavy hole (HH) band, both in good agreement with previous work. An overall energy shift of the XUV dielectric function is assigned to a thermally induced band gap shrinkage by formation of acoustic phonons, which is observed to be on a timescale of 4-5 ps, in agreement with previously measured optical phonon lifetimes. The results reveal that the transient reflectivity signal at an angle of 66 with respect to the surface normal is dominated by changes to the real part of the dielectric function, due to the near critical angle of incidence of the experiment (66-70 for the range of XUV energies used. This work provides a methodology for interpreting XUV transient reflectivity near core-level transitions, and it demonstrates the power of the XUV spectral region for measuring ultrafast excitation dynamics in solids.
- Published
- 2018
5. Valley-resolved electronic coherences in silicon observed by attosecond transient absorption spectroscopy
- Author
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Zürch, M, Kraus, PM, Chang, HT, Cushing, SK, Neumark, DM, and Leone, SR
- Abstract
Electronic coherences are observed in silicon by attosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. Various sub-4 fs oscillations across the conduction band reveal complex couplings between valence-conduction and conduction-conduction bands indicating pathways for coherent preparation of highly excited electrons.
- Published
- 2018
6. Ultrafast valley-resolved carrier dynamics in group IV semiconductors
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Zürch, M, Chang, HT, Borja, LJ, Kraus, PM, Cushing, SK, Gandman, A, Kaplan, CJ, Oh, MH, Prell, JS, Prendergast, D, Pemmaraju, CD, Neumark, DM, and Leone, SR
- Abstract
Attosecond transient absorption spectroscopy at the M4,5-edge of Ge following ultrafast photoexcitation reveals valley-resolved hot electron and hole relaxation, carrier recombination and trapping in Ge and Si-Ge alloy in unprecedented clarity and simultaneously.
- Published
- 2018
7. Valley-dependent carrier and lattice dynamics in silicon measured by transient XUV spectroscopy
- Author
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Cushing, SK, Carneiro, LM, Zürch, M, Kraus, PM, Kaplan, CJ, Chang, HT, and Leone, SR
- Abstract
Transient XUV core level spectroscopy is used to resolve photoexcited electron and hole distributions, as well as carrier-phonon and phonon-phonon scattering times, in the Γ, L, and X valleys of silicon.
- Published
- 2017
8. Attosecond kinetics of photoexcited Germanium
- Author
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Kraus, PM, Kaplan, CJ, Zuerch, M, Chang, HT, Jager, MF, Cushing, SK, Borja, LJ, Neumark, DM, and Leone, SR
- Abstract
Attosecond transient reflectivity is developed to observe the photoexcitation dynamics in germanium. Attosecond time-resolved measurements of the dielectric function reveal a fewfemtosecond collective electronic response time, which renormalizes the Coulomb interaction between the excited carriers.
- Published
- 2017
9. Electron and Hole Dynamics in Silicon-Germanium Alloy Measured by Attosecond XUV Transient Absorption
- Author
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Zürch, M, Borja, LJ, Chang, H-T, Kraus, PM, Cushing, S, Kaplan, CJ, Gandman, A, Prell, JS, Pemmaraju, CD, Prendergast, D, Neumark, DM, and Leone, SR
- Abstract
Electron-hole dynamics is measured by attosecond transient absorption in silicongermanium alloy. The germanium atoms act as reporter atoms by time-dependent probing the M4,5-edge, revealing electron and hole dynamics, as well as a new midgap feature.
- Published
- 2016
10. Attosecond transient reflectivity of electron dynamics in germanium
- Author
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Kraus, PM, Kaplan, CJ, Borja, LJ, Zürch, M, Chang, HT, Jager, MF, Ott, C, Currier, K, Neumark, DM, and Leone, SR
- Abstract
Attosecond transient reflectivity in the extreme ultraviolet is developed for monitoring band-gap excitation dynamics in germanium. The investigations unravel the fastest carrierscattering processes on the few-femtosecond time scale, and carrier thermalization on longer time scales.
- Published
- 2016
11. Author Correction: The ultrafast X- ray spectroscopic revolution in chemical dynamics (Nature Reviews Chemistry, 2018 (10.1038/s41570-018-0008-8))
- Author
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Kraus, PM, Kraus, PM, Zürch, M, Cushing, SK, Neumark, DM, Leone, SR, Kraus, PM, Kraus, PM, Zürch, M, Cushing, SK, Neumark, DM, and Leone, SR
- Abstract
In the original version of the article the authors inadvertently omitted to acknowledge funding from the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Gas Phase Chemical Physics Program under contract no. DE- AC02-05-CH11231. This has been corrected in all versions of the published article.
- Published
- 2018
12. Tracking the insulator-to-metal phase transition in VO2with few-femtosecond extreme UV transient absorption spectroscopy
- Author
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Jager, MF, Ott, C, Kraus, PM, Kaplan, CJ, Pouse, W, Marvel, RE, Haglund, RF, Neumark, DM, and Leone, SR
- Subjects
Condensed Matter::Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
© 2017, National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. Coulomb correlations can manifest in exotic properties in solids, but how these properties can be accessed and ultimately manipulated in real time is not well understood. The insulator-to-metal phase transition in vanadium dioxide (VO2) is a canonical example of such correlations. Here, few-femtosecond extreme UV transient absorption spectroscopy (FXTAS) at the vanadium M2,3edge is used to track the insulator-to-metal phase transition in VO2. This technique allows observation of the bulk material in real time, follows the photoexcitation process in both the insulating and metallic phases, probes the subsequent relaxation in the metallic phase, and measures the phase-transition dynamics in the insulating phase. An understanding of the VO2absorption spectrum in the extreme UV is developed using atomic cluster model calculations, revealing V3+/d2character of the vanadium center. We find that the insulator-to-metal phase transition occurs on a timescale of 26 ± 6 fs and leaves the system in a long-lived excited state of the metallic phase, driven by a change in orbital occupation. Potential interpretations based on electronic screening effects and lattice dynamics are discussed. A Mott–Hubbard-type mechanism is favored, as the observed timescales and d2nature of the vanadium metal centers are inconsistent with a Peierls driving force. The findings provide a combined experimental and theoretical roadmap for using time-resolved extreme UV spectroscopy to investigate nonequilibrium dynamics in strongly correlated materials.
- Published
- 2017
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13. Breaking Abbe's diffraction limit with harmonic deactivation microscopy.
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Murzyn K, van der Geest MLS, Guery L, Nie Z, van Essen P, Witte S, and Kraus PM
- Abstract
Nonlinear optical microscopy provides elegant means for label-free imaging of biological samples and condensed matter systems. The widespread areas of application could even be increased if resolution was improved, which the famous Abbe diffraction limit now restrains. Super-resolution techniques can break the diffraction limit but most rely on fluorescent labeling. This makes them incompatible with (sub)femtosecond temporal resolution and applications that demand the absence of labeling. Here, we introduce harmonic deactivation microscopy (HADES) for breaking the diffraction limit in nonfluorescent samples. By controlling the harmonic generation process on the quantum level with a second donut-shaped pulse, we confine the third-harmonic generation to three times below the original focus size of a scanning microscope. We demonstrate that resolution improvement by deactivation is more efficient for higher harmonic orders and only limited by the maximum applicable deactivation-pulse fluence. This provides a route toward sub-100-nanometer resolution in a regular nonlinear microscope.
- Published
- 2024
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14. Mid-infrared optical parametric chirped-pulse amplifier at 50 W and 38 fs pumped by a high-power Yb-InnoSlab platform.
- Author
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Buss JH, Starosielec S, Schulz M, Riedel R, Campi F, Lehmann CS, Witte S, and Kraus PM
- Abstract
High-power Yb:InnoSlab lasers are proliferating into multiple modern application areas of laser physics ranging from plasma physics and nanolithography to driving optical parametric amplifiers for high-harmonic generation and attosecond science. Here, we present, the layout, design and first results of an optical parametric chirped-pulse amplifier system pumped by a kW-level average power Yb-InnoSlab laser. We describe the layout and concepts of the pump lasers, with particular attention to the specific design principles required for our application. In the current configuration, the pump laser delivers up to 933 W, 18.7 mJ, 1.2 ps pulses at 50 kHz repetition rate. In a first attempt this has generated above 70 W average power at 2 μm via parametric amplification. Chirped-mirror compression resulted in mJ-level pulses at 50 W and 38-fs pulse duration (5.7 cycles at 2 μm).
- Published
- 2024
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15. Near-Unity All-Optical Modulation of Third-Harmonic Generation with a Fano-Resonant Dielectric Metasurface.
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Bijloo F, Murzyn K, van Emmerik F, den Boef AJ, Kraus PM, and Koenderink AF
- Abstract
We demonstrate all-optical modulation with a near-unity contrast of nonlinear light generation in a dielectric metasurface. We study third-harmonic generation from silicon Fano-resonant metasurfaces excited by femtosecond pulses at 1480 nm wavelength. We modulate the metasurface resonance by free carrier excitation induced by absorption of an 800 nm pump pulse, leading to up to 93% suppression of third-harmonic generation. Modulation and recovery occur on (sub)picosecond time scales. According to the Drude model, the pump-induced refractive index change blue-shifts the metasurface resonance away from the generation pulse, causing a strong modulation of third-harmonic conversion efficiency. The principle holds great promise for spatiotemporal programmability of nonlinear light generation.
- Published
- 2024
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16. Enhancing the efficiency of high-order harmonics with two-color non-collinear wave mixing in silica.
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Roscam Abbing SDC, Kuzkova N, van der Linden R, Campi F, de Keijzer B, Morice C, Zhang ZY, van der Geest MLS, and Kraus PM
- Abstract
The emission of high-order harmonics from solids under intense laser-pulse irradiation is revolutionizing our understanding of strong-field solid-light interactions, while simultaneously opening avenues towards novel, all-solid, coherent, short-wavelength table-top sources with tailored emission profiles and nanoscale light-field control. To date, broadband spectra in solids have been generated well into the extreme-ultraviolet (XUV), but the comparatively low conversion efficiency in the XUV range achieved under optimal conditions still lags behind gas-based high-harmonic generation (HHG) sources. Here, we demonstrate that two-color high-order harmonic wave mixing in a fused silica solid is more efficient than solid HHG driven by a single color. This finding has significant implications for compact XUV sources where gas-based HHG is not feasible, as solid XUV wave mixing surpasses solid-HHG in performance. Moreover, our results enable utilizing solid high-order harmonic wave mixing as a probe of structure or material dynamics of the generating solid, which will enable reducing measurement times compared to the less efficient regular solid HHG. The emission intensity scaling that follows perturbative optical wave mixing, combined with the angular separation of the emitted frequencies, makes our approach a decisive step for all-solid coherent XUV sources and for studying light-engineered materials., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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17. Toward Complete All-Optical Intensity Modulation of High-Harmonic Generation from Solids.
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van Essen PJ, Nie Z, de Keijzer B, and Kraus PM
- Abstract
Optical modulation of high-harmonics generation in solids enables the detection of material properties, such as the band structure, and promising new applications, such as super-resolution imaging in semiconductors. Various recent studies have shown optical modulation of high-harmonics generation in solids, in particular, suppression of high-harmonics generation has been observed by synchronized or delayed multipulse sequences. Here we provide an overview of the underlying mechanisms attributed to this suppression and provide a perspective on the challenges and opportunities regarding these mechanisms. All-optical control of high-harmonic generation allows for femtosecond, and in the future possibly subfemtosecond, switching, which has numerous possible applications: These range from super-resolution microscopy to nanoscale controlled chemistry and highly tunable nonlinear light sources., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interest., (© 2024 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.)
- Published
- 2024
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18. XUV Absorption Spectroscopy and Photoconversion of a Tin-Oxo Cage Photoresist.
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Sadegh N, Evrard Q, Kraus PM, and Brouwer AM
- Abstract
Extreme ultraviolet lithography has recently been introduced in high-volume production of integrated circuits for manufacturing the smallest features in high-end computer chips. Hybrid organic/inorganic materials are considered as the next generation of photoresists for this technology, but detailed knowledge about the response of such materials to the ionizing radiation used (13.5 nm, 92 eV) is still scarce. In the present work, we use broadband high-harmonic radiation in the energy range 22-70 eV for absorption spectroscopy and photobleaching (that is, the decrease of absorbance) of thin films of an n -butyltin oxo-cage, a representative of the class of metal-based EUV photoresist. The shape of the absorption spectrum in the range 22-92 eV matches well with the spectrum predicted using tabulated atomic cross sections. The photobleaching results are consistent with loss of the butyl side groups due to the breaking of Sn-C bonds following photoionization. Bleaching is strongest in the low-energy range (<40 eV), where the absorption is largely due to the carbon atoms in the organic groups. At higher energies (42-70 eV), absorption is dominated by the tin atoms, and since these remain in the film after photoconversion, the absorption change in this region is smaller. It is estimated that after prolonged irradiation (up to ∼3 J cm
-2 in the range 22-40 eV) about 70% of the hydrocarbon groups are removed from the film. The rate of bleaching is high at the beginning of exposure, but it rapidly decreases with increasing conversion. We rationalize this using density functional theory calculations: the first Sn-C bonds are efficiently cleaved (quantum yield Φ ≈ 0.9), because the highest occupied molecular orbitals (HOMOs) (from which an electron is removed after photoionization) are located on Sn-C sigma bonds. In the photoproducts, the HOMO is localized on tin atoms that have lost their hydrocarbon group (formally reduced to the Sn(II) oxidation state), and holes formed on those tin atoms lead to less efficient cleavage reactions. Our results reveal the primary reaction steps following excitation with ionizing radiation of tin-oxo cages. Our methodology represents a systematic approach of studying and quantitatively assessing the performance of new photoresists and as such enables the development of future EUV photoresists., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interest., (© 2024 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.)- Published
- 2024
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19. Following the Nonthermal Phase Transition in Niobium Dioxide by Time-Resolved Harmonic Spectroscopy.
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Nie Z, Guery L, Molinero EB, Juergens P, van den Hooven TJ, Wang Y, Jimenez Galan A, Planken PCM, Silva REF, and Kraus PM
- Abstract
Photoinduced phase transitions in correlated materials promise diverse applications from ultrafast switches to optoelectronics. Resolving those transitions and possible metastable phases temporally are key enablers for these applications, but challenge existing experimental approaches. Extreme nonlinear optics can help probe phase changes, as higher-order nonlinearities have higher sensitivity and temporal resolution to band structure and lattice deformations. Here the ultrafast transition from the semiconducting to the metallic phases in polycrystalline thin-film NbO_{2} is investigated by time-resolved harmonic spectroscopy. The emission strength of all harmonic orders shows a steplike suppression when the excitation fluence exceeds a threshold (∼11-12 mJ/cm^{2}), below the fluence required for the thermal transition-a signature of the nonthermal emergence of a metallic phase within 100±20 fs. This observation is backed by full ab initio simulations as well as a 1D chain model of high-harmonic generation from both phases. Our results demonstrate femtosecond harmonic probing of phase transitions and nonthermal dynamics in solids.
- Published
- 2023
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20. Transient High-Harmonic Spectroscopy in an Inorganic-Organic Lead Halide Perovskite.
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van der Geest MLS, de Boer JJ, Murzyn K, Jürgens P, Ehrler B, and Kraus PM
- Abstract
High-harmonic generation is the frequency upconversion of an intense femtosecond infrared laser in a material. In condensed-phase high-harmonic generation, laser-driven currents of coherently excited charge carriers map the electronic structure onto the emitted light. This promises a thus far scarcely explored potential of condensed-phase time-resolved high-harmonic spectroscopy for probing carrier dynamics. Here, we realize this potential and use time-resolved solid-state high-harmonic spectroscopy from a laser-excited methylammonium lead bromide (MAPbBr
3 ) thin film, a key material in perovskite solar cells, for measuring carrier cooling and relaxation on femto- and picosecond time scales. Through comparison with transient absorption, we show the links between carrier dynamics and experimental observables of generated harmonics. By highlighting and understanding the interplay of these dynamics, we demonstrate transient optical control over the emission of solid-state high-harmonic generation in MAPbBr3 .- Published
- 2023
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21. Extreme-Ultraviolet Excited Scintillation of Methylammonium Lead Bromide Perovskites.
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van der Geest MLS, McGovern L, van Vliet S, Zwaan HY, Grimaldi G, de Boer J, Bliem R, Ehrler B, and Kraus PM
- Abstract
Inorganic-Organic lead halide materials have been recognized as potential high-energy X-ray detectors because of their high quantum efficiencies and radiation hardness. Surprisingly little is known about whether the same is true for extreme-ultraviolet (XUV) radiation, despite applications in nuclear fusion research and astrophysics. We used a table-top high-harmonic generation setup in the XUV range between 20 and 45 eV to photoexcite methylammonium lead bromide (MAPbBr
3 ) and measure its scintillation properties. The strong absorbance combined with multiple carriers being excited per photon yield a very high carrier density at the surface, triggering photobleaching reactions that rapidly reduce the emission intensity. Concurrent to and in spite of this photobleaching, a recovery of the emission intensity as a function of dose was observed. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction measurements of XUV-exposed and unexposed areas show that this recovery is caused by XUV-induced oxidation of MAPbBr3 , which removes trap states that normally quench emission, thus counteracting the rapid photobleaching caused by the extremely high carrier densities. Furthermore, it was found that preoxidizing the sample with ozone was able to prolong and improve this intensity recovery, highlighting the impact of surface passivation on the scintillation properties of perovskite materials in the XUV range., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interest., (© 2022 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.)- Published
- 2022
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22. Extreme-Ultraviolet Shaping and Imaging by High-Harmonic Generation from Nanostructured Silica.
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Roscam Abbing SDC, Kolkowski R, Zhang ZY, Campi F, Lötgering L, Koenderink AF, and Kraus PM
- Abstract
Coherent extreme-ultraviolet pulses from high-harmonic generation have ample applications in attosecond science, lensless imaging, and industrial metrology. However, tailoring complex spatial amplitude, phase, and polarization properties of extreme-ultraviolet pulses is made nontrivial by the lack of efficient optical elements. Here, we have overcome this limitation through nanoengineered solid samples, which enable direct control over amplitude and phase patterns of nonlinearly generated extreme-ultraviolet pulses. We demonstrate experimental configurations and emitting structures that yield spatially patterned beam profiles, increased conversion efficiencies, and tailored polarization states. Furthermore, we use the emitted patterns to reconstruct height profiles, probe the near-field confinement in nanostructures below the diffraction limit of the fundamental radiation, and to image complex structures through coherent diffractive emission from these structures. Our results pave the way for introducing sub-fundamental-wavelength resolution imaging, direct manipulation of beams through nanoengineered samples, and metrology of nanostructures into the extreme-ultraviolet spectral range.
- Published
- 2022
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23. Divergence and efficiency optimization in polarization-controlled two-color high-harmonic generation.
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Roscam Abbing SDC, Campi F, Zeltsi A, Smorenburg P, and Kraus PM
- Abstract
Improving the brightness of high-harmonic generation (HHG) sources is one of the major goals for next-generation ultrafast, imaging and metrology applications in the extreme-ultraviolet spectrum. Previous research efforts have demonstrated a plethora of techniques to increase the conversion efficiency of HHG. However, few studies so far have addressed how to simultaneously minimize the divergence and improve focusability, which all contribute to an increased brightness of the source. Here, we investigate how to improve both photon yield and divergence, which is directly linked to focusability, when adding the second harmonic to the fundamental driving field. We study the effects of the relative polarization in two-color HHG and compare the results to a one-color configuration. In a perpendicular two-color field, the relative phase between the two colors can be used to suppress or enhance recombination of either the long or the short trajectories. This allows to exert control over the divergence of the harmonics. In a parallel two-color field, the ionization rate is modified through the two-color phase, which selects trajectories during the ionization step. This enhances the total yield. We elaborate on the underlying mechanisms for parallel, perpendicular, and intermediate polarization angles, and confirm our experimental observations with simulations., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2021
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24. Extreme ultraviolet-excited time-resolved luminescence spectroscopy using an ultrafast table-top high-harmonic generation source.
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van der Geest MLS, Sadegh N, Meerwijk TM, Wooning EI, Wu L, Bloem R, Castellanos Ortega S, Brouwer AM, and Kraus PM
- Abstract
We present a table-top extreme ultraviolet (XUV) beamline for measuring time- and frequency-resolved XUV-excited optical luminescence (XEOL) with additional femtosecond-resolution XUV transient absorption spectroscopy functionality. XUV pulses are generated via high-harmonic generation using a near-infrared pulse in a noble gas medium and focused to excite luminescence from a solid sample. The luminescence is collimated and guided into a streak camera where its spectral components are temporally resolved with picosecond temporal resolution. We time-resolve XUV-excited luminescence and compare the results to luminescence decays excited at longer wavelengths for three different materials: (i) sodium salicylate, an often used XUV scintillator; (ii) fluorescent labeling molecule 4-carbazole benzoic (CB) acid; and (iii) a zirconium metal oxo-cluster labeled with CB, which is a photoresist candidate for extreme-ultraviolet lithography. Our results establish time-resolved XEOL as a new technique to measure transient XUV-driven phenomena in solid-state samples and identify decay mechanisms of molecules following XUV and soft-x-ray excitation.
- Published
- 2021
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25. Attosecond Time-Domain Measurement of Core-Level-Exciton Decay in Magnesium Oxide.
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Géneaux R, Kaplan CJ, Yue L, Ross AD, Bækhøj JE, Kraus PM, Chang HT, Guggenmos A, Huang MY, Zürch M, Schafer KJ, Neumark DM, Gaarde MB, and Leone SR
- Abstract
Excitation of ionic solids with extreme ultraviolet pulses creates localized core-level excitons, which in some cases couple strongly to the lattice. Here, core-level-exciton states of magnesium oxide are studied in the time domain at the Mg L_{2,3} edge with attosecond transient reflectivity spectroscopy. Attosecond pulses trigger the excitation of these short-lived quasiparticles, whose decay is perturbed by time-delayed near-infrared pulses. Combined with a few-state theoretical model, this reveals that the infrared pulse shifts the energy of bright (dipole-allowed) core-level-exciton states as well as induces features arising from dark core-level excitons. We report coherence lifetimes for the two lowest core-level excitons of 2.3±0.2 and 1.6±0.5 fs and show that these are primarily a consequence of strong exciton-phonon coupling, disclosing the drastic influence of structural effects in this ultrafast relaxation process.
- Published
- 2020
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26. Efficient table-top dual-wavelength beamline for ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy in the soft X-ray region.
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Barreau L, Ross AD, Garg S, Kraus PM, Neumark DM, and Leone SR
- Abstract
We present a table-top beamline providing a soft X-ray supercontinuum extending up to 370 eV from high-order harmonic generation with sub-13 fs 1300 nm driving pulses and simultaneous production of sub-5 fs pulses centered at 800 nm. Optimization of high harmonic generation in a long and dense gas medium yields a photon flux of ~ 1.4 × 10
6 photons/s/1% bandwidth at 300 eV. The temporal resolution of X-ray transient absorption experiments with this beamline is measured to be 11 fs for 800 nm excitation. This dual-wavelength approach, combined with high flux and high spectral and temporal resolution soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy, is a new route to the study of ultrafast electronic dynamics in carbon-containing molecules and materials at the carbon K-edge.- Published
- 2020
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27. Hot phonon and carrier relaxation in Si(100) determined by transient extreme ultraviolet spectroscopy.
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Cushing SK, Zürch M, Kraus PM, Carneiro LM, Lee A, Chang HT, Kaplan CJ, and Leone SR
- Abstract
The thermalization of hot carriers and phonons gives direct insight into the scattering processes that mediate electrical and thermal transport. Obtaining the scattering rates for both hot carriers and phonons currently requires multiple measurements with incommensurate timescales. Here, transient extreme-ultraviolet (XUV) spectroscopy on the silicon 2p core level at 100 eV is used to measure hot carrier and phonon thermalization in Si(100) from tens of femtoseconds to 200 ps, following photoexcitation of the indirect transition to the Δ valley at 800 nm. The ground state XUV spectrum is first theoretically predicted using a combination of a single plasmon pole model and the Bethe-Salpeter equation with density functional theory. The excited state spectrum is predicted by incorporating the electronic effects of photo-induced state-filling, broadening, and band-gap renormalization into the ground state XUV spectrum. A time-dependent lattice deformation and expansion is also required to describe the excited state spectrum. The kinetics of these structural components match the kinetics of phonons excited from the electron-phonon and phonon-phonon scattering processes following photoexcitation. Separating the contributions of electronic and structural effects on the transient XUV spectra allows the carrier population, the population of phonons involved in inter- and intra-valley electron-phonon scattering, and the population of phonons involved in phonon-phonon scattering to be quantified as a function of delay time.
- Published
- 2018
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28. Perspectives of Attosecond Spectroscopy for the Understanding of Fundamental Electron Correlations.
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Kraus PM and Wörner HJ
- Abstract
The description of the electronic structure of molecules in terms of molecular orbitals is a highly successful concept in chemistry. However, it commonly fails if the electrons in a molecule are strongly correlated and cannot be treated as independent particles. Electron correlation is essential to understand inner-valence X-ray spectroscopies, it can drive ultrafast charge migration in molecules, and it is responsible for many exotic properties of strongly correlated materials. Time-resolved spectroscopy with attosecond resolution is generally capable of following electronic motion in real time and can thus provide experimental access to electron-correlation-driven phenomena. High-harmonic spectroscopy in particular uses the precisely timed laser-driven recollision of electrons to interrogate the electronic structure and dynamics of the investigated system on a sub-femtosecond timescale. In this Review, the capabilities of high-harmonic spectroscopy to follow electronic motion in molecules are discussed. Both qualitative and quantitative approaches to unraveling the detailed dynamical responses of molecular systems following ionization are presented. A new theoretical formalism for the reconstruction of correlation-driven charge migration is introduced. The importance of electron-ion entanglement and electronic coherence in the reconstruction of attosecond hole dynamics are discussed. These advances make high-harmonic spectroscopy a promising technique to decode fundamental electron correlations and to provide experimental data on the complex manifestations of multi-electron dynamics., (© 2018 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2018
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29. Attosecond transient absorption instrumentation for thin film materials: Phase transitions, heat dissipation, signal stabilization, timing correction, and rapid sample rotation.
- Author
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Jager MF, Ott C, Kaplan CJ, Kraus PM, Neumark DM, and Leone SR
- Abstract
We present an extreme ultraviolet (XUV) transient absorption apparatus tailored to attosecond and femtosecond measurements on bulk solid-state thin-film samples, specifically when the sample dynamics are sensitive to heating effects. The setup combines methodology for stabilizing sub-femtosecond time-resolution measurements over 48 h and techniques for mitigating heat buildup in temperature-dependent samples. Single-point beam stabilization in pump and probe arms and periodic time-zero reference measurements are described for accurate timing and stabilization. A hollow-shaft motor configuration for rapid sample rotation, raster scanning capability, and additional diagnostics are described for heat mitigation. Heat transfer simulations performed using a finite element analysis allow comparison of sample rotation and traditional raster scanning techniques for 100 Hz pulsed laser measurements on vanadium dioxide, a material that undergoes an insulator-to-metal transition at a modest temperature of 340 K. Experimental results are presented confirming that the vanadium dioxide (VO
2 ) sample cannot cool below its phase transition temperature between laser pulses without rapid rotation, in agreement with the simulations. The findings indicate the stringent conditions required to perform rigorous broadband XUV time-resolved absorption measurements on bulk solid-state samples, particularly those with temperature sensitivity, and elucidate a clear methodology to perform them.- Published
- 2018
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30. Charge migration and charge transfer in molecular systems.
- Author
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Wörner HJ, Arrell CA, Banerji N, Cannizzo A, Chergui M, Das AK, Hamm P, Keller U, Kraus PM, Liberatore E, Lopez-Tarifa P, Lucchini M, Meuwly M, Milne C, Moser JE, Rothlisberger U, Smolentsev G, Teuscher J, van Bokhoven JA, and Wenger O
- Abstract
The transfer of charge at the molecular level plays a fundamental role in many areas of chemistry, physics, biology and materials science. Today, more than 60 years after the seminal work of R. A. Marcus, charge transfer is still a very active field of research. An important recent impetus comes from the ability to resolve ever faster temporal events, down to the attosecond time scale. Such a high temporal resolution now offers the possibility to unravel the most elementary quantum dynamics of both electrons and nuclei that participate in the complex process of charge transfer. This review covers recent research that addresses the following questions. Can we reconstruct the migration of charge across a molecule on the atomic length and electronic time scales? Can we use strong laser fields to control charge migration? Can we temporally resolve and understand intramolecular charge transfer in dissociative ionization of small molecules, in transition-metal complexes and in conjugated polymers? Can we tailor molecular systems towards specific charge-transfer processes? What are the time scales of the elementary steps of charge transfer in liquids and nanoparticles? Important new insights into each of these topics, obtained from state-of-the-art ultrafast spectroscopy and/or theoretical methods, are summarized in this review.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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31. Tracking the insulator-to-metal phase transition in VO 2 with few-femtosecond extreme UV transient absorption spectroscopy.
- Author
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Jager MF, Ott C, Kraus PM, Kaplan CJ, Pouse W, Marvel RE, Haglund RF, Neumark DM, and Leone SR
- Abstract
Coulomb correlations can manifest in exotic properties in solids, but how these properties can be accessed and ultimately manipulated in real time is not well understood. The insulator-to-metal phase transition in vanadium dioxide (VO
2 ) is a canonical example of such correlations. Here, few-femtosecond extreme UV transient absorption spectroscopy (FXTAS) at the vanadium M2,3 edge is used to track the insulator-to-metal phase transition in VO2 This technique allows observation of the bulk material in real time, follows the photoexcitation process in both the insulating and metallic phases, probes the subsequent relaxation in the metallic phase, and measures the phase-transition dynamics in the insulating phase. An understanding of the VO2 absorption spectrum in the extreme UV is developed using atomic cluster model calculations, revealing V3+ /d2 character of the vanadium center. We find that the insulator-to-metal phase transition occurs on a timescale of 26 ± 6 fs and leaves the system in a long-lived excited state of the metallic phase, driven by a change in orbital occupation. Potential interpretations based on electronic screening effects and lattice dynamics are discussed. A Mott-Hubbard-type mechanism is favored, as the observed timescales and d2 nature of the vanadium metal centers are inconsistent with a Peierls driving force. The findings provide a combined experimental and theoretical roadmap for using time-resolved extreme UV spectroscopy to investigate nonequilibrium dynamics in strongly correlated materials., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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32. Ultrafast carrier thermalization and trapping in silicon-germanium alloy probed by extreme ultraviolet transient absorption spectroscopy.
- Author
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Zürch M, Chang HT, Kraus PM, Cushing SK, Borja LJ, Gandman A, Kaplan CJ, Oh MH, Prell JS, Prendergast D, Pemmaraju CD, Neumark DM, and Leone SR
- Abstract
Semiconductor alloys containing silicon and germanium are of growing importance for compact and highly efficient photonic devices due to their favorable properties for direct integration into silicon platforms and wide tunability of optical parameters. Here, we report the simultaneous direct and energy-resolved probing of ultrafast electron and hole dynamics in a silicon-germanium alloy with the stoichiometry Si
0.25 Ge0.75 by extreme ultraviolet transient absorption spectroscopy. Probing the photoinduced dynamics of charge carriers at the germanium M4,5 -edge (∼30 eV) allows the germanium atoms to be used as reporter atoms for carrier dynamics in the alloy. The photoexcitation of electrons across the direct and indirect band gap into conduction band (CB) valleys and their subsequent hot carrier relaxation are observed and compared to pure germanium, where the Ge direct [Formula: see text] and Si0.25 Ge0.75 indirect gaps ([Formula: see text]) are comparable in energy. In the alloy, comparable carrier lifetimes are observed for the X, L, and Γ valleys in the conduction band. A midgap feature associated with electrons accumulating in trap states near the CB edge following intraband thermalization is observed in the Si0.25 Ge0.75 alloy. The successful implementation of the reporter atom concept for capturing the dynamics of the electronic bands by site-specific probing in solids opens a route to study carrier dynamics in more complex materials with femtosecond and sub-femtosecond temporal resolution.- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Direct and simultaneous observation of ultrafast electron and hole dynamics in germanium.
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Zürch M, Chang HT, Borja LJ, Kraus PM, Cushing SK, Gandman A, Kaplan CJ, Oh MH, Prell JS, Prendergast D, Pemmaraju CD, Neumark DM, and Leone SR
- Abstract
Understanding excited carrier dynamics in semiconductors is crucial for the development of photovoltaics and efficient photonic devices. However, overlapping spectral features in optical pump-probe spectroscopy often render assignments of separate electron and hole carrier dynamics ambiguous. Here, ultrafast electron and hole dynamics in germanium nanocrystalline thin films are directly and simultaneously observed by ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy in the extreme ultraviolet at the germanium M
4,5 edge. We decompose the spectra into contributions of electronic state blocking and photo-induced band shifts at a carrier density of 8 × 1020 cm-3 . Separate electron and hole relaxation times are observed as a function of hot carrier energies. A first-order electron and hole decay of ∼1 ps suggests a Shockley-Read-Hall recombination mechanism. The simultaneous observation of electrons and holes with extreme ultraviolet transient absorption spectroscopy paves the way for investigating few- to sub-femtosecond dynamics of both holes and electrons in complex semiconductor materials and across junctions.- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Simultaneous generation of sub-5-femtosecond 400 nm and 800 nm pulses for attosecond extreme ultraviolet pump-probe spectroscopy.
- Author
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Chang HT, Zürch M, Kraus PM, Borja LJ, Neumark DM, and Leone SR
- Abstract
Few-cycle laser pulses with wavelengths centered at 400 nm and 800 nm are simultaneously obtained through wavelength separation of ultrashort, spectrally broadened Vis-NIR laser pulses spanning 350-1100 nm wavelengths. The 400 nm and 800 nm pulses are separately compressed, yielding pulses with 4.4 fs and 3.8 fs duration, respectively. The pulse energy exceeds 5 μJ for the 400 nm pulses and 750 μJ for the 800 nm pulses. Intense 400 nm few-cycle pulses have a broad range of applications in nonlinear optical spectroscopy, which include the study of photochemical dynamics, semiconductors, and photovoltaic materials on few-femtosecond to attosecond time scales. The ultrashort 400 nm few-cycle pulses generated here not only extend the spectral range of the optical pulse for NIR-XUV attosecond pump-probe spectroscopy but also pave the way for two-color, three-pulse, multidimensional optical-XUV spectroscopy experiments.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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35. Measurement and laser control of attosecond charge migration in ionized iodoacetylene.
- Author
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Kraus PM, Mignolet B, Baykusheva D, Rupenyan A, Horný L, Penka EF, Grassi G, Tolstikhin OI, Schneider J, Jensen F, Madsen LB, Bandrauk AD, Remacle F, and Wörner HJ
- Abstract
The ultrafast motion of electrons and holes after light-matter interaction is fundamental to a broad range of chemical and biophysical processes. We advanced high-harmonic spectroscopy to resolve spatially and temporally the migration of an electron hole immediately after ionization of iodoacetylene while simultaneously demonstrating extensive control over the process. A multidimensional approach, based on the measurement and accurate theoretical description of both even and odd harmonic orders, enabled us to reconstruct both quantum amplitudes and phases of the electronic states with a resolution of ~100 attoseconds. We separately reconstructed quasi-field-free and laser-controlled charge migration as a function of the spatial orientation of the molecule and determined the shape of the hole created by ionization. Our technique opens the prospect of laser control over electronic primary processes., (Copyright © 2015, American Association for the Advancement of Science.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Observation of laser-induced electronic structure in oriented polyatomic molecules.
- Author
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Kraus PM, Tolstikhin OI, Baykusheva D, Rupenyan A, Schneider J, Bisgaard CZ, Morishita T, Jensen F, Madsen LB, and Wörner HJ
- Abstract
All attosecond time-resolved measurements have so far relied on the use of intense near-infrared laser pulses. In particular, attosecond streaking, laser-induced electron diffraction and high-harmonic generation all make use of non-perturbative light-matter interactions. Remarkably, the effect of the strong laser field on the studied sample has often been neglected in previous studies. Here we use high-harmonic spectroscopy to measure laser-induced modifications of the electronic structure of molecules. We study high-harmonic spectra of spatially oriented CH3F and CH3Br as generic examples of polar polyatomic molecules. We accurately measure intensity ratios of even and odd-harmonic orders, and of the emission from aligned and unaligned molecules. We show that these robust observables reveal a substantial modification of the molecular electronic structure by the external laser field. Our insights offer new challenges and opportunities for a range of emerging strong-field attosecond spectroscopies.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Two-pulse field-free orientation reveals anisotropy of molecular shape resonance.
- Author
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Kraus PM, Baykusheva D, and Wörner HJ
- Abstract
We report the observation of macroscopic field-free orientation, i.e., more than 73% of CO molecules pointing in the same direction. This is achieved through an all-optical scheme operating at high particle densities (>10(17) cm(-3)) that combines one-color (ω) and two-color (ω+2ω) nonresonant femtosecond laser pulses. We show that the achieved orientation solely relies on the hyperpolarizability interaction as opposed to an ionization-depletion mechanism, thus, opening a wide range of applications. The achieved strong orientation enables us to reveal the molecular-frame anisotropies of the photorecombination amplitudes and phases caused by a shape resonance. The resonance appears as a local maximum in the even-harmonic emission around 28 eV. In contrast, the odd-harmonic emission is suppressed in this spectral region through the combined effects of an asymmetric photorecombination phase and a subcycle Stark effect, generic for polar molecules, that we experimentally identify.
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
38. The sensitivities of high-harmonic generation and strong-field ionization to coupled electronic and nuclear dynamics.
- Author
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Baykusheva D, Kraus PM, Zhang SB, Rohringer N, and Wörner HJ
- Abstract
The sensitivities of high-harmonic generation (HHG) and strong-field ionization (SFI) to coupled electronic and nuclear dynamics are studied, using the nitric oxide (NO) molecule as an example. A coherent superposition of electronic and rotational states of NO is prepared by impulsive stimulated Raman scattering and probed by simultaneous detection of HHG and SFI yields. We observe a fourfold higher sensitivity of high-harmonic generation to electronic dynamics and attribute it to the presence of inelastic quantum paths connecting coherently related electronic states [Kraus et al., Phys. Rev. Lett.111, 243005 (2013)]. Whereas different harmonic orders display very different sensitivities to rotational or electronic dynamics, strong-field ionization is found to be most sensitive to electronic motion. We introduce a general theoretical formalism for high-harmonic generation from coupled nuclear-electronic wave packets. We show that the unequal sensitivities of different harmonic orders to electronic or rotational dynamics result from the angle dependence of the photorecombination matrix elements which encode several autoionizing and shape resonances in the photoionization continuum of NO. We further study the dependence of rotational and electronic coherences on the intensity of the excitation pulse and support the observations with calculations.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. High-harmonic probing of electronic coherence in dynamically aligned molecules.
- Author
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Kraus PM, Zhang SB, Gijsbertsen A, Lucchese RR, Rohringer N, and Wörner HJ
- Abstract
We introduce and demonstrate a new approach to measuring coherent electron wave packets using high-harmonic spectroscopy. By preparing a molecule in a coherent superposition of electronic states, we show that electronic coherence opens previously unobserved high-harmonic-generation channels that connect distinct but coherently related electronic states. Performing the measurements in dynamically aligned nitric oxide molecules we observe the complex temporal evolution of the electronic coherence under coupling to nuclear motion. Choosing a weakly allowed transition to prepare the wave packet, we demonstrate an unprecedented sensitivity that arises from optical interference between coherent and incoherent pathways. This mechanism converts a 0.1% excitation fraction into a ∼20% signal modulation.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Attosecond nuclear dynamics in the ammonia cation: relation between high-harmonic and photoelectron spectroscopies.
- Author
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Kraus PM and Wörner HJ
- Subjects
- Cations chemistry, Photoelectron Spectroscopy, Time Factors, Ammonia chemistry, Molecular Dynamics Simulation
- Abstract
We report measurements of the umbrella motion in the ammonia cation on the attosecond time scale. The motion is prepared by strong-field ionization and probed by photorecombination through the process of high-harmonic generation. Performing such measurements at multiple wavelengths (0.8, 1.44, 1.8 μm) enables us to follow the nuclear dynamics over a broad temporal range (0.8-3.8 fs). The intensity of the driving field is found to have a significant impact on the observed dynamics through the vibrational-state dependence of the strong-field ionization rates. We derive a general model that includes these effects and establishes a new link between high-harmonic spectroscopy and classical photoelectron spectroscopy. Our model reproduces the observed dynamics and their dependence on the intensity of the driving field. Moreover, the model predicts much richer nuclear dynamics on the few-fs timescale than most previous theories. The newly predicted features are shown to reflect the quantized vibronic level structure of the molecular cation., (Copyright © 2013 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Probing electronic dynamics during photochemical reactions.
- Author
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Tehlar A, Kraus PM, and Wörner HJ
- Subjects
- Electrons, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Lasers, Photochemical Processes, Photochemistry
- Abstract
This review discusses a new method for probing the evolution of the valence-electron structure of molecules during chemical reactions. The method relies on the interaction of an intense infrared laser pulse with molecules that results in the emission of attosecond pulses (1 as = 10(-18) s) in a process known as high-harmonic generation. Time-resolved high-harmonic spectroscopy measures the phase and amplitude of attosecond pulses emitted from the reacting molecules through interference with the emission from the unexcited molecules. This coherent detection mechanism provides a high sensitivity to small excitation fractions and direct access to both the amplitude and the phase of attosecond pulses, the latter of which is otherwise very difficult to measure. These observables reveal several complementary aspects of excited-state photochemical dynamics such as dissociation, adiabatic wave-packet evolution and conical intersection dynamics.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. High-harmonic spectroscopy of oriented OCS molecules: emission of even and odd harmonics.
- Author
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Kraus PM, Rupenyan A, and Wörner HJ
- Abstract
We study the emission of even and odd high-harmonic orders from oriented OCS molecules. We use an intense, nonresonant femtosecond laser pulse superimposed with its phase-controlled second harmonic field to impulsively align and orient a dense sample of molecules from which we subsequently generate high-order harmonics. The even harmonics appear around the full revivals of the rotational dynamics. We demonstrate perfect coherent control over their intensity through the subcycle delay of the two-color fields. The odd harmonics are insensitive to the degree of orientation, but modulate with the degree of axis alignment, in agreement with calculated photorecombination dipole moments. We further compare the shape of the even and odd harmonic spectra with our calculations and determine the degree of orientation.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Direct amplitude shaping of high harmonics in the extreme ultraviolet.
- Author
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Kiselev D, Kraus PM, Bonacina L, Wörner HJ, and Wolf JP
- Abstract
We demonstrate direct amplitude shaping of high harmonics (HHs) using a reflective micromirror array based on micro-electromechanical-system (MEMS) technology. We show independent control over the intensity of each HH in the observed range (14 - 36 eV). These results are used to calculate the control achieved over the temporal structure of the attosecond pulses in the train.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Unusual mechanism for H3(+) formation from ethane as obtained by femtosecond laser pulse ionization and quantum chemical calculations.
- Author
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Kraus PM, Schwarzer MC, Schirmel N, Urbasch G, Frenking G, and Weitzel KM
- Abstract
The formation of H(3)(+) from saturated hydrocarbon molecules represents a prototype of a complex chemical process, involving the breaking and the making of chemical bonds. We present a combined theoretical and experimental investigation providing for the first time an understanding of the mechanism of H(3)(+) formation at the molecular level. The experimental approach involves femtosecond laser pulse ionization of ethane leading to H(3)(+) ions with kinetic energies on the order of 4 to 6.5 eV. The theoretical approach involves high-level quantum chemical calculation of the complete reaction path. The calculations confirm that the process takes place on the potential energy surface of the ethane dication. A surprising result of the theoretical investigation is, that the transition state of the process can be formally regarded as a H(2) molecule attached to a C(2)H(4)(2+) entity but IRC calculations show that it belongs to the reaction channel yielding C(2)H(3)(+) + H(3)(+). Experimentally measured kinetic energies of the correlated H(3)(+) and C(2)H(3)(+) ions confirm the reaction path suggested by theory.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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