Ultrafast destructuring of laser-irradiated tungsten: Thermal or nonthermal process

H. Zhang, C. Li, E. Bevillon, G. Cheng, J. P. Colombier, R. Stoian

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

25 Scopus citations

Abstract

The time needed for metals to respond structurally to electronic excitation is usually considered to be set by picosecond-long electron-phonon coupling, hence limiting the rapid achievement of structural phase changes. Via time-resolved ellipsometry, we show that fs laser excitation of tungsten determines unexpectedly fast optical and structural transformations, almost on the time scale of the laser pulse, with sub-ps destructuring of matter. If at low energies, below the damage threshold, Fermi redistribution within the d-band pseudogap populates localized states that screen ions, in ablative ranges, at electronic energies above 4 eV, a charge deficit appears on bonding orbitals generating bond-softening and ionic repulsion in spite of the metallic environment. Along pressure gradients, this rapidly destabilizes the structure. Sub-ps ablation occurs, challenging thermally driven scenarios of phonon activation. First-principles and hydrodynamic models show that ablation interrelates nonclassical charge distortions, electronic stress, and classical electron-phonon dynamics, with the coexistence of thermal and nonthermal effects on scales believed to be prohibitive for the former.

Original languageEnglish
Article number224103
JournalPhysical Review B
Volume94
Issue number22
DOIs
StatePublished - 16 Dec 2016
Externally publishedYes

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