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Dive into the research topics where Damjan Krizmancic is active.

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Featured researches published by Damjan Krizmancic.


Nano Letters | 2011

Magnetic Proximity Effect as a Pathway to Spintronic Applications of Topological Insulators

I. Vobornik; Unnikrishnan Manju; J. Fujii; F. Borgatti; Piero Torelli; Damjan Krizmancic; Yew San Hor; R. J. Cava; G. Panaccione

Spin-based electronics in topological insulators (TIs) is favored by the long spin coherence(1,2) and consequently fault-tolerant information storage. Magnetically doped TIs are ferromagnetic up to 13 K,(3) well below any practical operating condition. Here we demonstrate that the long-range ferromagnetism at ambient temperature can be induced in Bi(2-x)Mn(x)Te(3) by the magnetic proximity effect through deposited Fe overlayer. This result opens a new path to interface-controlled ferromagnetism in TI-based spintronic devices.


SRI 2009, 10TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON RADIATION INSTRUMENTATION | 2010

TEMPO: a New Insertion Device Beamline at SOLEIL for Time Resolved Photoelectron Spectroscopy Experiments on Solids and Interfaces

F. Polack; Mathieu G. Silly; Christian Chauvet; B. Lagarde; Nicolas Bergeard; M. Izquierdo; O. Chubar; Damjan Krizmancic; M. Ribbens; J.‐P. Duval; C. Basset; S. Kubsky; Fausto Sirotti

A new insertion device beamline is now operational on straight section 8 at the SOLEIL synchrotron radiation source in France. The beamline and the experimental station were developed to optimize the study of the dynamics of electronic and magnetic properties of materials. Here we present the main technical characteristics of the installation and the general principles behind them. The source is composed of two APPLE II type insertion devices. The monochromator with plane gratings and spherical mirrors is working in the energy range 40–1500 eV. It is equipped with VLS, VGD gratings to allow the user optimization of flux or higher harmonics rejection. The observed resonance structures measured in gas phase enable us to determine the available energy resolution: a resolving power higher than 10000 is obtained at the Ar 2p, N 1s and Ne K‐edges when using all the optical elements at full aperture. The total flux as a function of the measured photon energy and the characterization of the focal spot size comple...


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2009

Advanced photoelectric effect experiment beamline at Elettra: A surface science laboratory coupled with Synchrotron Radiation.

G. Panaccione; I. Vobornik; J. Fujii; Damjan Krizmancic; E. Annese; L. Giovanelli; F. Maccherozzi; F. Salvador; A. De Luisa; D. Benedetti; A. Gruden; P. Bertoch; F. Polack; D. Cocco; Giovanni Sostero; B. Diviacco; M. Hochstrasser; U. Maier; D. Pescia; C. H. Back; Thomas Greber; Jürg Osterwalder; M. Galaktionov; M. Sancrotti; G. Rossi

We report the main characteristics of the advanced photoelectric effect experiments beamline, operational at Elettra storage ring, featuring a fully independent double branch scheme obtained by the use of chicane undulators and able to keep polarization control in both linear and circular mode. The paper describes the novel technical solutions adopted, namely, (a) the design of a quasiperiodic undulator resulting in optimized suppression of higher harmonics over a large photon energy range (10-100 eV), (b) the thermal stability of optics under high heat load via cryocoolers, and (c) the end station interconnected setup allowing full access to off-beam and on-beam facilities and, at the same time, the integration of users specialized sample growth chambers or modules.


Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2011

Time‐resolved photoelectron spectroscopy using synchrotron radiation time structure

Nicolas Bergeard; Mathieu G. Silly; Damjan Krizmancic; Christian Chauvet; Guzzo M; Ricaud Jp; M. Izquierdo; Stebel L; Pittana P; Sergo R; Cautero G; Dufour G; Rochet F; Fausto Sirotti

Synchrotron radiation time structure is becoming a common tool for studying dynamic properties of materials. The main limitation is often the wide time domain the user would like to access with pump-probe experiments. In order to perform photoelectron spectroscopy experiments over time scales from milliseconds to picoseconds it is mandatory to measure the time at which each measured photoelectron was created. For this reason the usual CCD camera-based two-dimensional detection of electron energy analyzers has been replaced by a new delay-line detector adapted to the time structure of the SOLEIL synchrotron radiation source. The new two-dimensional delay-line detector has a time resolution of 5u2005ns and was installed on a Scienta SES 2002 electron energy analyzer. The first application has been to characterize the time of flight of the photoemitted electrons as a function of their kinetic energy and the selected pass energy. By repeating the experiment as a function of the available pass energy and of the kinetic energy, a complete characterization of the analyzer behaviour in the time domain has been obtained. Even for kinetic energies as low as 10u2005eV at 2u2005eV pass energy, the time spread of the detected electrons is lower than 140u2005ns. These results and the time structure of the SOLEIL filling modes assure the possibility of performing pump-probe photoelectron spectroscopy experiments with the time resolution given by the SOLEIL pulse width, the best performance of the beamline and of the experimental station.


Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2017

Very efficient spin polarization analysis (VESPA): new exchange scattering-based setup for spin-resolved ARPES at APE-NFFA beamline at Elettra

Chiara Bigi; Pranab Kumar Das; Davide Benedetti; Federico Salvador; Damjan Krizmancic; Rudi Sergo; Andrea Martin; G. Panaccione; G. Rossi; J. Fujii; I. Vobornik

The VESPA new setup for spin-resolved angular-resolved photoemission spectroscopy is fully operational at the APE-NFFA beamline at the Elettra synchrotron, being a high-demand tool for the advanced investigation of the magnetic properties of materials, as well as the spin texture of complex non-magnetic low-dimensional systems (surfaces and nanostructures). Detailed descriptions of the detector and its characterization are reported.


Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2017

Pump−probe experiments at the TEMPO beamline using the low-α operation mode of Synchrotron SOLEIL

Mathieu G. Silly; Tom Ferté; Marie Agnès Tordeux; Debora Pierucci; Nathan Beaulieu; Christian Chauvet; Federico Pressacco; Fausto Sirotti; Horia Popescu; Víctor López-Flores; Marina Tortarolo; Maurizio Sacchi; N. Jaouen; Philippe Hollander; Jean Paul Ricaud; Nicolas Bergeard; C. Boeglin; Bharati Tudu; Renaud Delaunay; Jan Lüning; Gregory Malinowski; M. Hehn; Cédric Baumier; Franck Fortuna; Damjan Krizmancic; L. Stebel; Rudi Sergo; G. Cautero

The SOLEIL synchrotron radiation source is regularly operated in special filling modes dedicated to pump-probe experiments. Among others, the low-α mode operation is characterized by shorter pulse duration and represents the natural bridge between 50u2005ps synchrotron pulses and femtosecond experiments. Here, the capabilities in low-α mode of the experimental set-ups developed at the TEMPO beamline to perform pump-probe experiments with soft X-rays based on photoelectron or photon detection are presented. A 282u2005kHz repetition-rate femtosecond laser is synchronized with the synchrotron radiation time structure to induce fast electronic and/or magnetic excitations. Detection is performed using a two-dimensional space resolution plus time resolution detector based on microchannel plates equipped with a delay line. Results of time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy, circular dichroism and magnetic scattering experiments are reported, and their respective advantages and limitations in the framework of high-time-resolution pump-probe experiments compared and discussed.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

Design and optimization of a modular setup for measurements of three-dimensional spin polarization with ultrafast pulsed sources

Tommaso Pincelli; V. N. Petrov; G. Brajnik; R. Ciprian; V. Lollobrigida; P. Torelli; Damjan Krizmancic; F. Salvador; A. De Luisa; R. Sergo; A. Gubertini; G. Cautero; S. Carrato; G. Rossi; G. Panaccione

ULTRASPIN is an apparatus devoted to the measurement of the spin polarization (SP) of electrons ejected from solid surfaces in a UHV environment. It is designed to exploit ultrafast light sources (free electron laser or laser high harmonic generation) and to perform (photo)electron spin analysis by an arrangement of Mott scattering polarimeters that measure the full SP vector. The system consists of two interconnected UHV vessels: one for surface science sample cleaning treatments, e-beam deposition of ultrathin films, and low energy electron diffraction/AES characterization. The sample environment in the polarimeter allows for cryogenic cooling and in-operando application of electric and magnetic fields. The photoelectrons are collected by an electrostatic accelerator and transport lens that form a periaxial beam that is subsequently directed by a Y-shaped electrostatic deflector to either one of the two orthogonal Mott polarimeters. The apparatus has been designed to operate in the extreme conditions of ultraintense single-X-ray pulses as originated by free electron lasers (up to 1 kHz), but it allows also for the single electron counting mode suitable when using statistical sources such as synchrotron radiation, cw-laser, or e-gun beams (up to 150 kcps).


Structural Dynamics | 2018

Laser induced phase transition in epitaxial FeRh layers studied by pump-probe valence band photoemission

Federico Pressacco; V. Uhlíř; Matteo Gatti; A. Nicolaou; Azzedine Bendounan; J. A. Arregi; Sheena Patel; Eric E. Fullerton; Damjan Krizmancic; Fausto Sirotti

We use time-resolved X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy to probe the electronic and magnetization dynamics in FeRh films after ultrafast laser excitations. We present experimental and theoretical results which investigate the electronic structure of FeRh during the first-order phase transition, identifying a clear signature of the magnetic phase. We find that a spin polarized feature at the Fermi edge is a fingerprint of the magnetic status of the system that is independent of the long-range ferromagnetic alignment of the magnetic domains. We use this feature to follow the phase transition induced by a laser pulse in a pump-probe experiment and find that the magnetic transition occurs in less than 50 ps and reaches its maximum in 100 ps.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2018

A reaction cell for ambient pressure soft x-ray absorption spectroscopy

C. Castán-Guerrero; Damjan Krizmancic; V. Bonanni; R. Edla; A. Deluisa; F. Salvador; G. Rossi; G. Panaccione; Piero Torelli

We present a new experimental setup for performing X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy (XAS) in the soft X-ray range at ambient pressure. The ambient pressure XAS setup is fully compatible with the ultra high vacuum environment of a synchrotron radiation spectroscopy beamline end station by means of ultrathin Si3N4 membranes acting as windows for the X-ray beam and seal of the atmospheric sample environment. The XAS detection is performed in total electron yield (TEY) mode by probing the drain current from the sample with a picoammeter. The high signal/noise ratio achievable in the TEY mode, combined with a continuous scanning of the X-ray energies, makes it possible recording XAS spectra in a few seconds. The first results show the performance of this setup to record fast XAS spectra from sample surfaces exposed at atmospheric pressure, even in the case of highly insulating samples. The use of a permanent magnet inside the reaction cell enables the measurement of X-ray magnetic circular dichroism at ambient pressure.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Role of Oxygen Deposition Pressure in the Formation of Ti Defect States in TiO2(001) Anatase Thin Films

B. Gobaut; P. Orgiani; A. Sambri; Emiliano Di Gennaro; C. Aruta; F. Borgatti; Valerio Lollobrigida; Denis Céolin; Jean-Pascal Rueff; Regina Ciancio; Chiara Bigi; Pranab Kumar Das; J. Fujii; Damjan Krizmancic; Piero Torelli; I. Vobornik; G. Rossi; Fabio Miletto Granozio; Umberto Scotti di Uccio; G. Panaccione

We report the study of anatase TiO2(001)-oriented thin films grown by pulsed laser deposition on LaAlO3(001). A combination of in situ and ex situ methods has been used to address both the origin of the Ti3+-localized states and their relationship with the structural and electronic properties on the surface and the subsurface. Localized in-gap states are analyzed using resonant X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and are related to the Ti3+ electronic configuration, homogeneously distributed over the entire film thickness. We find that an increase in the oxygen pressure corresponds to an increase in Ti3+ only in a well-defined range of deposition pressure; outside this range, Ti3+ and the strength of the in-gap states are reduced.

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Fausto Sirotti

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Mathieu G. Silly

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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B. Gobaut

Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste

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