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Ultrafast lattice disordering in VO2 accelerated by electronic collisional forces

ORAL

Abstract

Most ultrafast structural phase transitions are considered as chemical reactions that evolve on a potential energy surface along a reaction coordinate that transform the crystal between two structures. This cooperative motion scenario is not appropriate in the case of the photoexcited vanadium dioxide (VO2), where uncorrelated disorder of the local V-V dimers characterize the transition. We demonstrate via temperature-dependent femtosecond x-ray diffuse scattering that the disorder pathway is independent of the initial velocity distribution of the vanadium atoms, determined by the initial lattice temperature. The rapid loss of memory of the initial velocity suggests the presence of non-conservative forces in the photoexcited phase not accounted for in the potential energy, and that inertial dynamics are negligible in the VO2 ultrafast transition. We give arguments that suggest these non-conservative forces have an electronic origin.

Publication: Ultrafast lattice disordering in VO2 accelerated by electronic collisional forces

Presenters

  • Gilberto De La Pena

    SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Authors

  • Gilberto De La Pena

    SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

  • Alfredo A Correa

    Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab

  • Olivier Delaire

    Duke University

  • Yijing Huang

    Stanford University, Stanford Univ

  • Allan S Johnson

    ICFO – Institut de Ciencies Fotoniques, ICFO-Institut de Ciencies Fotoniques

  • Tetsuo Katayama

    RIKEN Spring-8 Center

  • Viktor Krapivin

    Stanford University, Stanford Univ

  • Ernest Pastor

    Ernest.Pastor@icfo.eu, ICFO-Institut de Ciencies Fotoniques

  • David A Reis

    Stanford Univ, Stanford PULSE Institute

  • Samuel W Teitelbaum

    Arizona State University, ASU

  • Luciana Vidas

    ICFO-Institut de Ciencies Fotoniques

  • Simon E Wall

    Aarhus University, Denmark, Aarhus University

  • Mariano Trigo

    SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab