Ultrafast large-amplitude relocation of electronic charge in ionic crystals

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Abstract

The interplay of vibrational motion and electronic charge relocation in an ionic hydrogen-bonded crystal is mapped by X-ray powder diffraction with a 100 fs time resolution. Photoexcitation of the prototype material KH 2PO 4 induces coherent low-frequency motions of the PO 4 tetrahedra in the electronically excited state of the crystal while the average atomic positions remain unchanged. Time-dependent maps of electron density derived from the diffraction data demonstrate an oscillatory relocation of electronic charge with a spatial amplitude two orders of magnitude larger than the underlying vibrational lattice motions. Coherent longitudinal optical and tranverse optical phonon motions that dephase on a time scale of several picoseconds, drive the charge relocation, similar to a soft (transverse optical) mode driven phase transition between the ferro- and paraelectric phase of KH 2PO 4.

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Zamponi, F., Rothhardt, P., Stingl, J., Woerner, M., & Elsaesser, T. (2012). Ultrafast large-amplitude relocation of electronic charge in ionic crystals. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 109(14), 5207–5212. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1108206109

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