A. Stange
University of Kiel
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Featured researches published by A. Stange.
Nature | 2011
T. Rohwer; S. Hellmann; M. Wiesenmayer; C. Sohrt; A. Stange; Bartosz Slomski; Adra Carr; Yanwei Liu; Luis Miaja Avila; M. Kalläne; Stefan Mathias; L. Kipp; K. Rossnagel; M. Bauer
Intense femtosecond (10−15 s) light pulses can be used to transform electronic, magnetic and structural order in condensed-matter systems on timescales of electronic and atomic motion. This technique is particularly useful in the study and in the control of materials whose physical properties are governed by the interactions between multiple degrees of freedom. Time- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy is in this context a direct and comprehensive, energy- and momentum-selective probe of the ultrafast processes that couple to the electronic degrees of freedom. Previously, the capability of such studies to access electron momentum space away from zero momentum was, however, restricted owing to limitations of the available probing photon energy. Here, using femtosecond extreme-ultraviolet pulses delivered by a high-harmonic-generation source, we use time- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy to measure the photoinduced vaporization of a charge-ordered state in the potential excitonic insulator 1T-TiSe2 (refs 12, 13). By way of stroboscopic imaging of electronic band dispersions at large momentum, in the vicinity of the edge of the first Brillouin zone, we reveal that the collapse of atomic-scale periodic long-range order happens on a timescale as short as 20 femtoseconds. The surprisingly fast response of the system is assigned to screening by the transient generation of free charge carriers. Similar screening scenarios are likely to be relevant in other photoinduced solid-state transitions and may generally determine the response times. Moreover, as electron states with large momenta govern fundamental electronic properties in condensed matter systems, we anticipate that the experimental advance represented by the present study will be useful to study the ultrafast dynamics and microscopic mechanisms of electronic phenomena in a wide range of materials.
Nature Communications | 2012
S. Hellmann; T. Rohwer; M. Kalläne; K. Hanff; C. Sohrt; A. Stange; Adra Carr; Margaret M. Murnane; Henry C. Kapteyn; L. Kipp; M. Bauer; K. Rossnagel
Distinguishing insulators by the dominant type of interaction is a central problem in condensed matter physics. Basic models include the Bloch-Wilson and the Peierls insulator due to electron-lattice interactions, the Mott and the excitonic insulator caused by electron-electron interactions, and the Anderson insulator arising from electron-impurity interactions. In real materials, however, all the interactions are simultaneously present so that classification is often not straightforward. Here, we show that time- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy can directly measure the melting times of electronic order parameters and thus identify-via systematic temporal discrimination of elementary electronic and structural processes-the dominant interaction. Specifically, we resolve the debates about the nature of two peculiar charge-density-wave states in the family of transition-metal dichalcogenides, and show that Rb intercalated 1T-TaS(2) is a Peierls insulator and that the ultrafast response of 1T-TiSe(2) is highly suggestive of an excitonic insulator.
Physical Review Letters | 2014
L. X. Yang; G. Rohde; T. Rohwer; A. Stange; K. Hanff; C. Sohrt; L. Rettig; Rocia Cortés; F. Chen; L. Feng; Th. Wolf; B. Kamble; I. Eremin; Tenio Popmintchev; Margaret M. Murnane; Henry C. Kapteyn; L. Kipp; J. Fink; M. Bauer; Uwe Bovensiepen; K. Rossnagel
Author(s): Yang, LX; Rohde, G; Rohwer, T; Stange, A; Hanff, K; Sohrt, C; Rettig, L; Cortes, R; Chen, F; Feng, DL; Wolf, T; Kamble, B; Eremin, I; Popmintchev, T; Murnane, MM; Kapteyn, HC; Kipp, L; Fink, J; Bauer, M; Bovensiepen, U; Rossnagel, K | Abstract: Time- and angle-resolved extreme ultraviolet photoemission spectroscopy is used to study the electronic structure dynamics in BaFe2As2 around the high-symmetry points Γ and M. A global oscillation of the Fermi level at the frequency of the A1g(As) phonon mode is observed. It is argued that this behavior reflects a modulation of the effective chemical potential in the photoexcited surface region that arises from the high sensitivity of the band structure near the Fermi level to the A1g(As) phonon mode combined with a low electron diffusivity perpendicular to the layers. The results establish a novel way to tune the electronic properties of iron pnictides: coherent control of the effective chemical potential. The results further suggest that the equilibration time for the effective chemical potential needs to be considered in the ultrafast electronic structure dynamics of materials with weak interlayer coupling.
Nature Communications | 2016
Stefan Mathias; Steffen Eich; J. Urbancic; Stephan Michael; Adra Carr; Sebastian Emmerich; A. Stange; Tenio Popmintchev; T. Rohwer; M. Wiesenmayer; A. Ruffing; S. Jakobs; S. Hellmann; Piotr Matyba; Cong Chen; L. Kipp; M. Bauer; Henry C. Kapteyn; Hans Christian Schneider; K. Rossnagel; Margaret M. Murnane; Martin Aeschlimann
Capturing the dynamic electronic band structure of a correlated material presents a powerful capability for uncovering the complex couplings between the electronic and structural degrees of freedom. When combined with ultrafast laser excitation, new phases of matter can result, since far-from-equilibrium excited states are instantaneously populated. Here, we elucidate a general relation between ultrafast non-equilibrium electron dynamics and the size of the characteristic energy gap in a correlated electron material. We show that carrier multiplication via impact ionization can be one of the most important processes in a gapped material, and that the speed of carrier multiplication critically depends on the size of the energy gap. In the case of the charge-density wave material 1T-TiSe2, our data indicate that carrier multiplication and gap dynamics mutually amplify each other, which explains—on a microscopic level—the extremely fast response of this material to ultrafast optical excitation.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2016
Lars-Philip Oloff; K. Hanff; A. Stange; G. Rohde; F. Diekmann; M. Bauer; K. Rossnagel
With the advent of ultrashort-pulsed extreme ultraviolet sources, such as free-electron lasers or high-harmonic-generation (HHG) sources, a new research field for photoelectron spectroscopy has opened up in terms of femtosecond time-resolved pump-probe experiments. The impact of the high peak brilliance of these novel sources on photoemission spectra, so-called vacuum space-charge effects caused by the Coulomb interaction among the photoemitted probe electrons, has been studied extensively. However, possible distortions of the energy and momentum distributions of the probe photoelectrons caused by the low photon energy pump pulse due to the nonlinear emission of electrons have not been studied in detail yet. Here, we systematically investigate these pump laser-induced space-charge effects in a HHG-based experiment for the test case of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite. Specifically, we determine how the key parameters of the pump pulse—the excitation density, wavelength, spot size, and emitted electron e...
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016
G. Rohde; A. Hendel; A. Stange; K. Hanff; Lars-Philip Oloff; L. X. Yang; K. Rossnagel; M. Bauer
An experimental setup for time- and angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy with sub-15 fs temporal resolution is presented. A hollow-fiber compressor is used for the generation of 6.5 fs white light pump pulses, and a high-harmonic-generation source delivers 11 fs probe pulses at a photon energy of 22.1 eV. A value of 13 fs full width at half-maximum of the pump-probe cross correlation signal is determined by analyzing a photoemission intensity transient probing a near-infrared interband transition in 1T-TiSe2. Notably, the energy resolution of the setup conforms to typical values reported in conventional time-resolved photoemission studies using high harmonics, and an ultimate resolution of 170 meV is feasible.
International Conference on Ultrafast Phenomena (2010), paper MG2 | 2010
T. Rohwer; S. Hellmann; M. Wiesenmayer; C. Sohrt; A. Stange; Bartosz Slomski; L. Kipp; K. Rossnagel; M. Bauer
Time- and angle-resolved XUV-photoemission at the border of the first Brillouin zone is employed to monitor the ultrafast suppression of a (2×2×2) reconstruction characteristic for the charge density wave (CDW) phase in 1T-TiSe2. The correlation of lattice dynamics and transient electronic response, which is probed in this experiment in parallel, provides new insights into the puzzling nature of the CDW mechanism in 1T-TiSe2.
Journal of Electron Spectroscopy and Related Phenomena | 2014
Steffen Eich; A. Stange; Adra Carr; J. Urbancic; Tenio Popmintchev; M. Wiesenmayer; Klaus Jansen; A. Ruffing; S. Jakobs; T. Rohwer; S. Hellmann; Cong Chen; Piotr Matyba; L. Kipp; K. Rossnagel; M. Bauer; Margaret M. Murnane; Henry C. Kapteyn; Stefan Mathias; Martin Aeschlimann
Faraday Discussions | 2014
C. Sohrt; A. Stange; M. Bauer; K. Rossnagel
Physical Review B | 2015
A. Stange; C. Sohrt; L. X. Yang; G. Rohde; K. Janssen; Petra Hein; Lars-Philip Oloff; K. Hanff; K. Rossnagel; M. Bauer