Exploring and Manipulating Materials with Ultrafast Linear and Nonlinear Scattering and Spectroscopy Techniques

Event time: 
October 9, 2024 - 4:00pm to 5:00pm
Location: 
Sterling Chemistry Laboratory (SCL), Room 111 See map
Event description: 

Please join Yale Chemistry for a Physical Chemistry Silliman Seminar with Michael Zuerch, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, from University of California, Berkeley.

Abstract: Our group specializes in ultrafast spectroscopic methods, enabling in-depth studies of material chemistry in intricate environments and the control of quantum phenomena on femtosecond timescales. In the first part of this seminar, I will discuss the role of lithium in various systems from its contribution to symmetry breaking (LiNbO3), to an exotic quantum material (polar metal LiOsO3), to unravel the reasons behind the low hopping rate of lithium ions at the surface of a solid-state electrolyte (LixLa(2-x)/3TiO3). All these systems share the common feature that Li occupies a symmetry-broken state which we can selectively probe using extreme-ultraviolet second-harmonic generation spectroscopy (XUV-SHG), a novel spectroscopy pioneered in my group. In the second part I will discuss recent results on 1T-TiSe2, a prototypical charge-density-wave (CDW) compound that also exhibits strong excitonic correlations in its low-temperature phase. I will discuss how we unravel the interplay of these different aspects via cryogenic attosecond transient extreme-ultraviolet absorption spectroscopy (cryo-ATAS), for which we built a unique laboratory instrument, and mega-electron-volt ultrafast electron diffraction (MeV-UED). I will show how photoexcitation leads to a 3D-to-2D dimension crossover in the CDW order parameter, a process dictated by the excitonic correlations in the system. The excitonic effect is further evidenced in the initial response of selected core-level absorption edges, and these observations help pinpoint the specific role of excitonic correlations in the CDW transition. I will also illustrate the hidden 1D nature of the CDW and its implications for the formation mechanism of domain-wall-like topological defects, which are found to emerge well under one picosecond following photoexcitation.

For more information about Prof. Zuerch’s research: http://www.zuerchlab.org/

Faculty Host: Prof. Mark Johnson

This seminar can be viewed online here: Panopto

 This seminar is generously sponsored by the Mrs. Hepsa Ely Silliman Memorial Fund.