2015
DOI: 10.1063/1.4935687
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Free electron laser-driven ultrafast rearrangement of the electronic structure in Ti

Abstract: High-energy density extreme ultraviolet radiation delivered by the FERMI seeded free-electron laser has been used to create an exotic nonequilibrium state of matter in a titanium sample characterized by a highly excited electron subsystem at temperatures in excess of 10 eV and a cold solid-density ion lattice. The obtained transient state has been investigated through ultrafast absorption spectroscopy across the Ti M2,3-edge revealing a drastic rearrangement of the sample electronic structure around the Fermi … Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…8000 ± 800 1410 ± 30 9.8 10.0 0.10 5 × 10 12 18 600 ± 1400 5200 ± 100 13.0 9.7 0.14 1 × 10 13 20 100 ± 300 4900 ± 300 12.2 9.2 0.59 Ni as discussed above. At higher laser intensity, when such excitation becomes possible the fraction of sp electrons also increases as in the case of Ni.…”
Section: Sp Band Vs D Band Thermalization Of Partially Filled D-bamentioning
confidence: 83%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…8000 ± 800 1410 ± 30 9.8 10.0 0.10 5 × 10 12 18 600 ± 1400 5200 ± 100 13.0 9.7 0.14 1 × 10 13 20 100 ± 300 4900 ± 300 12.2 9.2 0.59 Ni as discussed above. At higher laser intensity, when such excitation becomes possible the fraction of sp electrons also increases as in the case of Ni.…”
Section: Sp Band Vs D Band Thermalization Of Partially Filled D-bamentioning
confidence: 83%
“…As a result, the electron temperature stays above the lattice temperature during several picoseconds and the framework of a two-temperature model (TTM) can be used to describe laser-induced processes in metals [10,11]. Beyond a standard TTM, a fast electron thermalization is also assumed to describe the effect of high electron temperature on electronic, optical and thermal properties of metals [12][13][14][15][16]. The modification of electronic structure due to increase of the effective electron temperature can change the metal melting temperature [17,18], induce solid-solid phase transformation [19][20][21][22], and affect electron-phonon coupling dynamics [23,24].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This approximation is based on efficient screening of the optical field by surface electrons 21 and space-charge limitation of the maximum optical field intensity 22 . In contrast, femto-and picosecond core-level photoabsorption of metals systematically shows signatures of excitation-induced electronic structure modification at high intensities [23][24][25][26] . To bridge this gap of intensities and timescales, we used attosecond transient absorption spectroscopy to study collective electron dynamics in the transition metals Ti and Zr.…”
mentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Examples of pioneering soft X-ray L-edge FEL-XAS transmission experiments include measurements of Al, Ge and Ti thin films for variable fluence (see, for example, [37][38][39]). In those experiments, ultrafast electron heating pumping matter at extremely high temperatures, as well as saturable absorption effects were observed.…”
Section: Time-resolved X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy In the Water Windowmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Another field where one can exploit the XUV photons generated by the EuPRAXIA@SPARC_LAB FEL is the study by means of coherent electronic Raman process [39] of photo-induced chemical processes represented by the detection of electronic coherences (based on a composite X-ray pulse sequence) generated during the system dynamics [60]. For example, within such a scheme, a combination of short, soft X-ray FEL pulses can be used to directly detect the passage through conical intersections (CIs).…”
Section: Time-resolved Coherent Raman Experiments With X-ray Pulsesmentioning
confidence: 99%