Angew Chem Int Ed Engl
October 2024
We study by femtosecond infrared spectroscopy the ultrafast and persistent photoinduced phase transition of the RbMnCo[Fe(CN)] ⋅ 0.2HO material, induced at room temperature by a single laser shot. This system exhibits a charge-transfer based phase transition with a 75 K wide thermal hysteresis, centred at room temperature, from the low temperature Mn-N-C-Fe tetragonal phase to the high temperature Mn-N-C-Fe cubic phase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectron transfer is a fundamental energy conversion process widely present in synthetic, industrial, and natural systems. Understanding the electron transfer process is important to exploit the uniqueness of the low-dimensional van der Waals (vdW) heterostructures because interlayer electron transfer produces the function of this class of material. Here, we show the occurrence of an electron transfer process in one-dimensional layer-stacking of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) and boron nitride nanotubes (BNNTs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUltrafast photoinduced phase transitions at room temperature, driven by a single laser shot and persisting long after stimuli, represent emerging routes for ultrafast control over materials' properties. Time-resolved studies provide fundamental mechanistic insight into far-from-equilibrium electronic and structural dynamics. Here we study the photoinduced phase transformation of the RbMnCo[Fe(CN)] material, designed to exhibit a 75 K wide thermal hysteresis around room temperature between MnFe tetragonal and MnFe cubic phases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTriggering new stable macroscopic orders in materials by ultrafast optical or terahertz pump pulses is a difficult challenge, complicated by the interplay between multiscale microscopic mechanisms, and macroscopic excitation profiles in samples. In particular, the differences between the two types of excitations are still unclear. In this article, we compare the optical response on acoustic timescale of a VO Paramagnetic Metallic (PM) thin film excited by a terahertz (THz) pump or an optical pump, at room temperature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHerein we describe a novel spinning pump-probe photoacoustic technique developed to study nonlinear absorption in thin films. As a test case, an organic polycrystalline thin film of quinacridone, a well-known pigment, with a thickness in the tens of nanometers range, is excited by a femtosecond laser pulse which generates a time-domain Brillouin scattering signal. This signal is directly related to the strain wave launched from the film into the substrate and can be used to quantitatively extract the nonlinear optical absorption properties of the film itself.
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