@phdthesis{Pudell2020, author = {Pudell, Jan-Etienne}, title = {Lattice dynamics}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-48445}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-484453}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, pages = {XII, 259}, year = {2020}, abstract = {In this thesis I summarize my contribution to the research field of ultrafast structural dynamics in condensend matter. It consists of 17 publications that cover the complex interplay between electron, magnon, and phonon subsystems in solid materials and the resulting lattice dynamics after ultrafast photoexcitation. The investigation of such dynamics is necessary for the physical understanding of the processes in materials that might become important in the future as functional materials for technological applications, for example in data storage applications, information processing, sensors, or energy harvesting. In this work I present ultrafast x-ray diffraction (UXRD) experiments based on the optical pump - x-ray probe technique revealing the time-resolved lattice strain. To study these dynamics the samples (mainly thin film heterostructures) are excited by femtosecond near-infrared or visible light pulses. The induced strain dynamics caused by stresses of the excited subsystems are measured in a pump-probe scheme with x-ray diffraction (XRD) as a probe. The UXRD setups used during my thesis are a laser-driven table-top x-ray source and large-scale synchrotron facilities with dedicated time-resolved diffraction setups. The UXRD experiments provide quantitative access to heat reservoirs in nanometric layers and monitor the transient responses of these layers with coupled electron, magnon, and phonon subsystems. In contrast to optical probes, UXRD allows accessing the material-specific information, which is unavailable for optical light due to the detection of multiple indistinguishable layers in the range of the penetration depth. In addition, UXRD facilitates a layer-specific probe for layers buried opaque heterostructures to study the energy flow. I extended this UXRD technique to obtain the driving stress profile by measuring the strain dynamics in the unexcited buried layer after excitation of the adjacent absorbing layers with femtosecond laser pulses. This enables the study of negative thermal expansion (NTE) in magnetic materials, which occurs due to the loss of the magnetic order. Part of this work is the investigation of stress profiles which are the source of coherent acoustic phonon wave packets (hypersound waves). The spatiotemporal shape of these stress profiles depends on the energy distribution profile and the ability of the involved subsystems to produce stress. The evaluation of the UXRD data of rare-earth metals yields a stress profile that closely matches the optical penetration profile: In the paramagnetic (PM) phase the photoexcitation results in a quasi-instantaneous expansive stress of the metallic layer whereas in the antiferromagnetic (AFM) phase a quasi-instantaneous contractive stress and a second contractive stress contribution rising on a 10 ps time scale adds to the PM contribution. These two time scales are characteristic for the magnetic contribution and are in agreement with related studies of the magnetization dynamics of rare-earth materials. Several publications in this thesis demonstrate the scientific progress in the field of active strain control to drive a second excitation or engineer an ultrafast switch. These applications of ultrafast dynamics are necessary to enable control of functional material properties via strain on ultrafast time scales. For this thesis I implemented upgrades of the existing laser-driven table-top UXRD setup in order to achieve an enhancement of x-ray flux to resolve single digit nanometer thick layers. Furthermore, I developed and built a new in-situ time-resolved magneto-optic Kerr effect (MOKE) and optical reflectivity setup at the laser-driven table-top UXRD setup to measure the dynamics of lattice, electrons and magnons under the same excitation conditions.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Schick2013, author = {Schick, Daniel}, title = {Ultrafast lattice dynamics in photoexcited nanostructures : femtosecond X-ray diffraction with optimized evaluation schemes}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-68827}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, year = {2013}, abstract = {Within the course of this thesis, I have investigated the complex interplay between electron and lattice dynamics in nanostructures of perovskite oxides. Femtosecond hard X-ray pulses were utilized to probe the evolution of atomic rearrangement directly, which is driven by ultrafast optical excitation of electrons. The physics of complex materials with a large number of degrees of freedom can be interpreted once the exact fingerprint of ultrafast lattice dynamics in time-resolved X-ray diffraction experiments for a simple model system is well known. The motion of atoms in a crystal can be probed directly and in real-time by femtosecond pulses of hard X-ray radiation in a pump-probe scheme. In order to provide such ultrashort X-ray pulses, I have built up a laser-driven plasma X-ray source. The setup was extended by a stable goniometer, a two-dimensional X-ray detector and a cryogen-free cryostat. The data acquisition routines of the diffractometer for these ultrafast X-ray diffraction experiments were further improved in terms of signal-to-noise ratio and angular resolution. The implementation of a high-speed reciprocal-space mapping technique allowed for a two-dimensional structural analysis with femtosecond temporal resolution. I have studied the ultrafast lattice dynamics, namely the excitation and propagation of coherent phonons, in photoexcited thin films and superlattice structures of the metallic perovskite SrRuO3. Due to the quasi-instantaneous coupling of the lattice to the optically excited electrons in this material a spatially and temporally well-defined thermal stress profile is generated in SrRuO3. This enables understanding the effect of the resulting coherent lattice dynamics in time-resolved X-ray diffraction data in great detail, e.g. the appearance of a transient Bragg peak splitting in both thin films and superlattice structures of SrRuO3. In addition, a comprehensive simulation toolbox to calculate the ultrafast lattice dynamics and the resulting X-ray diffraction response in photoexcited one-dimensional crystalline structures was developed in this thesis work. With the powerful experimental and theoretical framework at hand, I have studied the excitation and propagation of coherent phonons in more complex material systems. In particular, I have revealed strongly localized charge carriers after above-bandgap femtosecond photoexcitation of the prototypical multiferroic BiFeO3, which are the origin of a quasi-instantaneous and spatially inhomogeneous stress that drives coherent phonons in a thin film of the multiferroic. In a structurally imperfect thin film of the ferroelectric Pb(Zr0.2Ti0.8)O3, the ultrafast reciprocal-space mapping technique was applied to follow a purely strain-induced change of mosaicity on a picosecond time scale. These results point to a strong coupling of in- and out-of-plane atomic motion exclusively mediated by structural defects.}, language = {en} }