47th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
Volume 61, Number 8
Monday–Friday, May 23–27, 2016;
Providence, Rhode Island
Session N3: Invited Session: Ultrafast Chemical and Nanoscale Dynamics
10:30 AM–12:30 PM,
Thursday, May 26, 2016
Room: Ballroom D
Chair: Christoph Bostedt, Argonne National Laboratory
Abstract ID: BAPS.2016.DAMOP.N3.2
Abstract: N3.00002 : Attosecond clocking of scattering dynamics in dielectrics
11:00 AM–11:30 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Matthias Kling
(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet Munich)
In the past few years electronic-device scaling has progressed rapidly and
miniaturization has reached physical gate lengths below 100 nm, heralding
the age of nanoelectronics. Besides the effort in size scaling of integrated
circuits, tremendous progress has recently been made in increasing the
switching speed where strong-field-based ``dielectric-electronics'' may push
it towards the petahertz frontier. In this contest, the investigation of the
electronic collisional dynamics occurring in a dielectric material is of
primary importance to fully understand the transport properties of such
future devices. Here, we demonstrate attosecond chronoscopy of electron
collisions in SiO$_{\mathrm{2}}$. In our experiment, a stream of isolated
aerodynamically focused SiO$_{\mathrm{2}}$ nanoparticles of 50 nm diameter
was delivered into the laser interaction region. Photoemission is initiated
by an isolated 250 as pulse at 35 eV and the electron dynamics is traced by
attosecond streaking using a delayed few-cycle laser pulse at 700 nm.
Electrons were detected by a kilohertz, single-shot velocity-map imaging
spectrometer, permitting to separate frames containing nanoparticle signals
from frames containing the response of the reference gas only. We find that
the nanoparticle photoemission exhibits a positive temporal shift with
respect to the reference. In order to understand the physical origin of the
shift we performed semi-classical Monte-Carlo trajectory simulations taking
into account the near-field distributions in- and outside the nanoparticles
as obtained from Mie theory. The simulations indicate a pronounced
dependence of the streaking time shift near the highest measured electron
energies on the inelastic scattering time, while elastic scattering only
shows a small influence on the streaking time shift for typical dielectric
materials. We envision our approach to provide direct time-domain access to
inelastic scattering for a wide range of dielectrics.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2016.DAMOP.N3.2