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Watching the birth of a charge density wave order: diffraction study on nanometer-and picosecond-scales
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2017
Year
Charge ExcitationsEngineeringNc-cdw OrderDiffraction StudyNanometer-and Picosecond-scalesElectron DiffractionCharge TransportCharge DensityQuantum MaterialsCdw StatesNanoscale SciencePhotophysical PropertyPhysicsQuantum ChemistryX-ray Free-electron LaserSolid-state PhysicNatural SciencesX-ray DiffractionApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter Physics
Femtosecond time-resolved X-ray diffraction is used to study a photo-induced phase transition between two charge density wave (CDW) states in 1T-TaS$_2$, namely the nearly commensurate (NC) and the incommensurate (I) CDW states. Structural modulations associated with the NC-CDW order are found to disappear within 400 fs. The photo-induced I-CDW phase then develops through a nucleation/growth process which ends 100 ps after laser excitation. We demonstrate that the newly formed I-CDW phase is fragmented into several nanometric domains that are growing through a coarsening process. The coarsening dynamics is found to follow the universal Lifshitz-Allen-Cahn growth law, which describes the ordering kinetics in systems exhibiting a non-conservative order parameter.