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Unconventional picosecond strain pulses resulting from the saturation of magnetic stress within a photoexcited rare earth layer. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Optical excitation of spin-ordered rare earth metals causes competing expansive and contractive stresses within the crystal lattice, influencing lattice behavior.
  • Using ultrafast x-ray diffraction, researchers analyze the strain response in a dysprosium film layered with a metallic structure when subjected to femtosecond laser pulses.
  • The findings reveal that energy transfer to magnetic excitations alters the typical strain wave behavior, leading to unusual unipolar strain pulses and indicating complex interactions within the film's nanolayer.

Article Abstract

Optical excitation of spin-ordered rare earth metals triggers a complex response of the crystal lattice since expansive stresses from electron and phonon excitations compete with a contractive stress induced by spin disorder. Using ultrafast x-ray diffraction experiments, we study the layer specific strain response of a dysprosium film within a metallic heterostructure upon femtosecond laser-excitation. The elastic and diffusive transport of energy to an adjacent, non-excited detection layer clearly separates the contributions of strain pulses and thermal excitations in the time domain. We find that energy transfer processes to magnetic excitations significantly modify the observed conventional bipolar strain wave into a unipolar pulse. By modeling the spin system as a saturable energy reservoir that generates substantial contractive stress on ultrafast timescales, we can reproduce the observed strain response and estimate the time- and space dependent magnetic stress. The saturation of the magnetic stress contribution yields a non-monotonous total stress within the nanolayer, which leads to unconventional picosecond strain pulses.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7101248PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.5145315DOI Listing

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