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Efficiency boost: Dual light pulses minimize energy for phase transitions

11.04.2024

bandgap opening

Visualisation of a laser beam melting a crystal. Image: Allan Johnson.

  • Researchers led by Allan Johnson (IMDEA Nanociencia) explain the mechanisms behind this counterintuitive phenomenon: making a phase transition effective requires less energy if it is initiated by two pulses of light instead of just one.
  • The energy needed to complete the phase transition has been reduced by 6%, and could be further optimised.
  • Local phase transitions are relevant to materials control in many aspects of technology, including data and energy storage.
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Madrid, April 11th, 2024. Phase transitions physically transform substances and uniformly change their properties. The typical example is boiling water which transforms liquid into a gas phase, resulting in an abrupt change in volume. There are other phase transitions with high relevance for technologies, such as data storage in compact or Blu-ray discs. During an optical data storage process, laser pulses change the structural phase of the surface material. The recording marks in discs are created by first melting the material with the laser and then rapidly cooling the molten material below its crystallization temperature; the process changes the reflectivity of the molten areas. This is known as phase-change recording.

In recent years the idea of using not one, but multiple laser pulses to control phase transitions has captured attention ever since it was realized that light could drive transitions coherently. Coherent phase transitions are interesting because they smoothly change the material between two phases. However, coherent control requires such a smooth connection between the crystal structures of two phases, and excludes many technologically relevant transitions such as crystalline-to-amorphous transitions in chalcogenide glasses for data storage.

A team of researchers led by Dr. Allan Johnson have demonstrated an alternative, incoherent route for material control that improves the energy efficiency of the phase transition in a material of reference, vanadium oxide (VO2). They found that the phase transition between the metallic and insulating phases when triggered by two pulses, instead of a single pulse, can require less energy.

The material studied – vanadium oxide – is a prototypical system for understanding phase transitions in quantum materials. It lies between charge density wave systems (transformed by a few long-wavelength modes, showing coherence) and crystalline-amorphous phase transitions (local uncorrelated distortions drive the transition, showing disorder). At high temperatures the vanadium oxide is in a metallic phase (rutile), but below 60° is in an insulating phase (monoclinic).

vanadium oxide phases

Typically, the excitation of the insulating phase with a pulse of light drives a vanadium dioxide crystal to the metallic phase. Allan Johnson and his team used an alternative strategy. They used a weak pulse to prepare a coherently vibrating state, to further excite the sample with a second light pulse after a small delay (in the range of picoseconds). To their amazement, they found that the energy threshold, at which the material begins to transform to the metallic phase, depends on the delay between the two pulses and that the energy needed to complete the phase transition is reduced in the double-pulse scheme, in comparison to the single pulse scheme.

The remarkable results indicate that multiple excitations can lower the energy needed to drive the phase transition in vanadium oxide up to 6%. When asked about the improvement, Allan Johnson says: “This may not seem much of an energy saving, but the process still remains be optimised and at the moment we don’t know how much we can gain. Furthermore, this method can potentially be applied to many materials, and this is very promising”.

The most interesting feature of their discovery is that the process could easily be transferred to existing devices that work with ultrafast pulsed laser beams, simply by dividing the pulse into two and delaying the time between pulses. Contrary to the limited range of materials that show structural coherence, correlated disorder can, in principle, be induced in any solid. Consequently, the inhomogeneous seeding strategy might be applicable to a broad range of solids, including those used in energy and data storage applications.

The eureka moment for Dr. Johnson was realising that their X-ray data – acquired non-stop during 3 long days and nights at X-ray laser facility in Japan  - matched the multiple pulse experiments from their own lab. They explained that the mechanism of control involves the formation of polarons, quasiparticles that form due to the coupling of excess electrons or holes with ionic vibrations.

Notably, while other scientists have observed similar phenomena in their laboratory data, the mechanisms behind these observations remained elusive until now. Allan Johnson and his collaborators have elucidated the underlying processes, highlighting the formation of polarons and their ordering in specific directions as a key factor in reducing the energy penalty to the metallic phase. Driving the phase transition by exciting this disordered state of motion can be achieved with less energy. Furthemore, the dynamic barrier lowering means that scientists are able to selectively reduce the energy required for the laser driven phase transition without increasing the probability of thermal switching, in contrast to other methods for improving the efficiency.

The results have been published in Nature Physics. The implications of this research extend beyond fundamental science, offering new avenues for precise material control and technological innovation. As the team continues to optimise the method and explore new materials, the potential for transformative advancements in material science and optical control remains high.

This work is a collaboration between researchers at IMDEA Nanociencia, Institut de Ciencies Fotoniques (ICFO), Institut de Physicque de Rennes (CNRS), Institute of Chemical Research (ICIQ), SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory (Stanford, USA) and Pohang Accelerator Labortory (Korea). The X-ray measurements were performed at BL3 of SACLA (Japan Synchrotron Radiation Research Institute). It has been cofunded by the seal Excellence Severo Ochoa awarded to IMDEA Nanociencia in 2017 and renovated in 2021.


Reference:

Allan S. Johnson et al. All- optical seeding of a light-induced phase transition with correlated disorder. Nature Physics (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41567-024-02474-4

https://repositorio.imdeananociencia.org/handle/20.500.12614/3601

 

Contact:

Dr. Allan Johnson
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
https://nanociencia.imdea.org/ultrafast-science-of-quantum-materials/home
Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/allan-johnson-232b4133/

Oficina de Divulgación y Comunicación en IMDEA Nanociencia
divulgacion.nanociencia [at]imdea.org
Twitter: @imdea_nano
Facebook: @imdeananociencia
Instagram: @imdeananociencia


Source: IMDEA Nanociencia.

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