Skip to main content
Publication

X-ray nanodiffraction imaging reveals distinct nanoscopic dynamics of an ultrafast phase transition.

Authors

Ahn, Youngjun; Cherukara, Mathew; Cai, Zhonghou; Bartlein, Michael; Zhou, Tao; DiChiara, Anthony; Walko, Donald; Holt, Martin; Fullerton, Eric; Evans, Paul; Wen, Haidan

Abstract

Ultrafast first-order phase transitions exhibit distinct transition pathways and dynamical propertiesthat are not accessible during quasi-equilibrium transitions. Phenomena arising at the ultrafast timescale are important for understanding the transition mechanisms and in applications using the fast switching of electronic properties or magnetism. These transitions are accompanied by nanoscale structural dynamics that have been challenging to explore by optical or electronic transport probes. Here, x-ray nanodiffraction imaging shows that the nanoscale structural dynamics arising in ultrafast phase transitions differ dramatically from the transitions under slowly varying parameters. The solid-solid phase transitions in a FeRh thin film involve concurrent structural and magnetic changes and can be sensitively probed by monitoring their diffraction signatures following femtosecond optical excitation. Time-dependent nanodiffraction maps with 100-ps temporal and 25-nm spatial resolutions reveal that the pre-existing nanoscale variation inphase composition results in spatially inhomogeneous changes of phase fraction after ultrafast optical excitation. The spatial inhomogeneity leads to nanoscale temperature variations and subsequent in-plane heat transport, which are responsible for spatially distinct relaxation pathways on nanometer length scales. The spatial gradients of the phase composition and elastic strain increase upon excitation rather than exhibiting the decrease previously reported in quasi-equilibrium transformations. Long-range elastic interactions thus do not play significant roles in the ultrafast phase transition. These microscopic insights into first-order phase transitions provide new routes to manipulate nanoscopic phases in functional materials on ultrafast time scales by engineering initial nanoscale phase distributions.