APS March Meeting 2013
Volume 58, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 18–22, 2013;
Baltimore, Maryland
Session C40: Focus Session: Control of Ultrathin Film Morphology
2:30 PM–5:42 PM,
Monday, March 18, 2013
Room: 349
Sponsoring
Unit:
DMP
Chair: Shirley Chang, University of California Davis
Abstract ID: BAPS.2013.MAR.C40.4
Abstract: C40.00004 : Probing phase transitions at surfaces with ultrafast electron diffraction
3:06 PM–3:42 PM
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Abstract
Author:
Michael Horn von Hoegen
(Department of Physics, University Duisburg-Essen)
The multitude of possible processes that can occur at surfaces cover many
orders of magnitude in the time domain. While large scale growth and
structure formation happens on a timescale of minutes and seconds, diffusion
is already much faster, but can still be observed by electron microscopy.
Many other processes as chemical reactions, phonon dynamics, or phase
transitions, however, take place on the femto- and picosecond timescale and
are yet way to fast for imaging techniques.
In order to study such ultrafast processes at surfaces we have combined
modern surface science techniques with fs laser pulses in a pump probe
scheme. We use a RHEED setup with grazing incident electrons of 7 - 30 keV
to ensure surface sensitivity. In order to overcome the velocity mismatch
between light and electrons a tilted pulse front scheme is used to achieve a
time resolution of less than 2 ps. The sample is excited with 800 nm photons
with a pulse energy of 0.5 mJ at 5 kHz repetition rate.
The huge potential of this technique for the study of transient surface
phenomena is demonstrated with the non-equilibrium dynamics of the In
induced c(8x2) reconstruction on Si(111). This surface exhibits a
Peierls-like phase transition at 100 K from a c(8x2) groundstate, which is
accompanied by the formation of a charge density wave (CDW), to (4x1)
excited state. Upon excitation by the fs-laser pulse this structural phase
transition is driven into the excited (4x1) state at a sample temperature of
20 K. The surface is only excited electronically, the CDW is lifted by photo
doping and the surface remains up to 500 ps in a super cooled excited (4x1)
state. Relaxation into the c(8x2) groundstate happens delayed through the
nucleation of the c(8x2) at defects which triggers a 1-dim.
recrystallisation front which propagates with the velocity of sound.
Utilizing the Debye Waller effect, the excitation, conversion and relaxation
of vibrational excitations in monolayer adsorbate systems like the Pb
induced HIC ($\surd $3x$\surd $3) phase on Si(111) was studied. Initially
only a high frequency optical mode with an amplitude parallel to the surface
is excited. Subsequently, this mode decays into low frequency acoustic modes
with an amplitude vertical to the surface which, however, do not couple to
the phonons of the Si substrate and survive for many nanoseconds.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2013.MAR.C40.4