Understanding interfacial charge-transfer
processes on the atomic
level is crucial to support the rational design of energy-challenge
relevant systems such as solar cells, batteries, and photocatalysts.
A femtosecond time-resolved core-level photoelectron spectroscopy
study is performed that probes
the electronic structure of the interface between ruthenium-based
N3 dye molecules and ZnO nanocrystals within the first picosecond
after photoexcitation and from the unique perspective of the Ru reporter
atom at the center of the dye. A transient chemical shift of the Ru
3d inner-shell photolines by (2.3 ± 0.2) eV to higher binding
energies is observed 500 fs after photoexcitation of the dye. The
experimental results are interpreted with the aid of ab initio calculations
using constrained density functional theory. Strong indications for
the formation of an interfacial charge-transfer state are presented,
providing direct insight into a transient electronic configuration
that may limit the efficiency of photoinduced free charge-carrier
generation.
The effect of a dense plasma environment on the energy levels of an embedded ion is usually described in terms of the lowering of its continuum level. For strongly coupled plasmas, the phenomenon is intimately related to the equation of state; hence, an accurate treatment is crucial for most astrophysical and inertial-fusion applications, where the case of plasma mixtures is of particular interest. Here we present an experiment showing that the standard density-dependent analytical models are inadequate to describe solid-density plasmas at the temperatures studied, where the reduction of the binding energies for a given species is unaffected by the different plasma environment (ion density) in either the element or compounds of that species, and can be accurately estimated by calculations only involving the energy levels of an isolated neutral atom. The results have implications for the standard approaches to the equation of state calculations.
We measured the relative arrival time between an optical pulse and a soft x-ray pulse from a free-electron laser. This femtosecond cross-correlation measurement was achieved by observing the change in optical reflectivity induced through the absorption of a fraction of the x-ray pulse. The main x-ray pulse energy remained available for an independent pump-probe experiment where the sample may be opaque to soft x-rays. The method was employed to correct the two-pulse delay data from a canonical pump-probe experiment and demonstrate 130 ± 20 fs (FWHM) temporal resolution. We further analyze possible timing jitter sources and point to future improvements.
The recent development of x-ray free electron lasers providing coherent, femtosecond-long pulses of high brilliance and variable energy opens new areas of scientific research in a variety of disciplines such as physics, chemistry, and biology. Pump-probe experimental techniques which observe the temporal evolution of systems after optical or x-ray pulse excitation are one of the main experimental schemes currently in use for ultrafast studies. The key challenge in these experiments is to reliably achieve temporal and spatial overlap of the x-ray and optical pulses. Here we present measurements of the x-ray pulse induced transient change of optical reflectivity from a variety of materials covering the soft x-ray photon energy range from 500eV to 2000eV and outline the use of this technique to establish and characterize temporal synchronization of the optical-laser and FEL x-ray pulses.
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