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Dive into the research topics where Heide Ibrahim is active.

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Featured researches published by Heide Ibrahim.


Nature Communications | 2014

Tabletop imaging of structural evolutions in chemical reactions demonstrated for the acetylene cation

Heide Ibrahim; Benji Wales; Samuel Beaulieu; Bruno E. Schmidt; Nicolas Thiré; Emmanuel Penka Fowe; Éric Bisson; C. T. Hebeisen; Vincent Wanie; Mathieu Giguère; Jean-Claude Kieffer; Michael Spanner; André D. Bandrauk; Joseph Sanderson; Michael S. Schuurman; François Légaré

The introduction of femto-chemistry has made it a primary goal to follow the nuclear and electronic evolution of a molecule in time and space as it undergoes a chemical reaction. Using Coulomb Explosion Imaging, we have shot the first high-resolution molecular movie of a to and fro isomerization process in the acetylene cation. So far, this kind of phenomenon could only be observed using vacuum ultraviolet light from a free-electron laser. Here we show that 266 nm ultrashort laser pulses are capable of initiating rich dynamics through multiphoton ionization. With our generally applicable tabletop approach that can be used for other small organic molecules, we have investigated two basic chemical reactions simultaneously: proton migration and C=C bond breaking, triggered by multiphoton ionization. The experimental results are in excellent agreement with the timescales and relaxation pathways predicted by new and quantitative ab initio trajectory simulations.


Journal of Physics B | 2016

Coherent control of D2/H2 dissociative ionization by a mid-infrared two-color laser field

Vincent Wanie; Heide Ibrahim; Samuel Beaulieu; Nicolas Thiré; Bruno E. Schmidt; Yunpei Deng; Ali Sami Alnaser; Igor Litvinyuk; Xiao-Min Tong; François Légaré

Steering the electrons during an ultrafast photo-induced process in a molecule influences the chemical behavior of the system, opening the door to the control of photochemical reactions and photobiological processes. Electrons can be efficiently localized using a strong laser field with a well-designed temporal shape of the electric component. Consequently, many experiments have been performed with laser sources in the near-infrared region (800 nm) in the interest of studying and enhancing the electron localization. However, due to its limited accessibility, the mid-infrared (MIR) range has barely been investigated, although it allows to efficiently control small molecules and even more complex systems. To push further the manipulation of basic chemical mechanisms, we used a MIR two-color (1800 and 900 nm) laser field to ionize H2 and D2 molecules and to steer the remaining electron during the photo-induced dissociation. The study of this prototype reaction led to the simultaneous control of four fragmentation channels. The results are well reproduced by a theoretical model solving the time-dependent Schrodinger equation for the molecular ion, identifying the involved dissociation mechanisms. By varying the relative phase between the two colors, asymmetries (i.e., electron localization selectivity) of up to 65% were obtained, corresponding to enhanced or equivalent levels of control compared to previous experiments. Experimentally easier to implement, the use of a two-color laser field leads to a better electron localization than carrier-envelope phase stabilized pulses and applying the technique in the MIR range reveals more dissociation channels than at 800 nm.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2014

In situ investigation of explosive crystallization in a-Ge: Experimental determination of the interface response function using dynamic transmission electron microscopy

Liliya Nikolova; Mark J. Stern; Jennifer M. MacLeod; Bryan W. Reed; Heide Ibrahim; Federico Rosei; Thomas LaGrange; Bradley J. Siwick

The crystallization of amorphous semiconductors is a strongly exothermic process. Once initiated the release of latent heat can be sufficient to drive a self-sustaining crystallization front through the material in a manner that has been described as explosive. Here, we perform a quantitative in situ study of explosive crystallization in amorphous germanium using dynamic transmission electron microscopy. Direct observations of the speed of the explosive crystallization front as it evolves along a laser-imprinted temperature gradient are used to experimentally determine the complete interface response function (i.e., the temperature-dependent front propagation speed) for this process, which reaches a peak of 16 m/s. Fitting to the Frenkel-Wilson kinetic law demonstrates that the diffusivity of the material locally/immediately in advance of the explosive crystallization front is inconsistent with those of a liquid phase. This result suggests a modification to the liquid-mediated mechanism commonly used to describe this process that replaces the phase change at the leading amorphous-liquid interface with a change in bonding character (from covalent to metallic) occurring in the hot amorphous material.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Decoupling Frequencies, Amplitudes and Phases in Nonlinear Optics

Bruno E. Schmidt; Philippe Lassonde; Guilmot Ernotte; Matteo Clerici; Roberto Morandotti; Heide Ibrahim; François Légaré

In linear optics, light fields do not mutually interact in a medium. However, they do mix when their field strength becomes comparable to electron binding energies in the so-called nonlinear optical regime. Such high fields are typically achieved with ultra-short laser pulses containing very broad frequency spectra where their amplitudes and phases are mutually coupled in a convolution process. Here, we describe a regime of nonlinear interactions without mixing of different frequencies. We demonstrate both in theory and experiment how frequency domain nonlinear optics overcomes the shortcomings arising from the convolution in conventional time domain interactions. We generate light fields with previously inaccessible properties by avoiding these uncontrolled couplings. Consequently, arbitrary phase functions are transferred linearly to other frequencies while preserving the general shape of the input spectrum. As a powerful application, we introduce deep UV phase control at 207 nm by using a conventional NIR pulse shaper.


Optics Express | 2017

2.5 TW, two-cycle IR laser pulses via frequency domain optical parametric amplification

Vincent Gruson; Guilmot Ernotte; Philippe Lassonde; A. Laramée; M. R. Bionta; Mohamed Chaker; L. Di Mauro; P. B. Corkum; Heide Ibrahim; Bruno E. Schmidt; François Légaré

Broadband optical parametric amplification in the IR region has reached a new milestone through the use of a non-collinear Frequency domain Optical Parametric Amplification system. We report a laser source delivering 11.6 fs pulses with 30 mJ of energy at a central wavelength of 1.8 μm at 10 Hz repetition rate corresponding to a peak power of 2.5 TW. The peak power scaling is accompanied by a pulse shortening of about 20% upon amplification due to the spectral reshaping with higher gain in the spectral wings. This source paves the way for high flux soft X-ray pulses and IR-driven laser wakefield acceleration.


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2017

Linearizing nonlinear optics

Bruno E. Schmidt; Philippe Lassonde; Guilmot Ernotte; Matteo Clerici; Roberto Morandotti; Heide Ibrahim; François Légaré

We demonstrate how Fourier Nonlinear Optics elegantly merges the simplicity of linear optics with the power of conventional nonlinear optics to achieve the decoupling of frequencies, amplitudes and phases in nonlinear processes.


International Conference on Ultrafast Phenomena (2016), paper UF2A.3 | 2016

Isotope Effect in the three Break-up Channels of the Acetylene Cation

Heide Ibrahim; Benji Wales; Samuel Beaulieu; Bruno E. Schmidt; Nicolas Thiré; Éric Bisson; Vincent Wanie; Jean-Claude Kieffer; Michael S. Schuurman; Joseph Sanderson; François Légaré

The dynamics and the isotope effect on the symmetric (CH++CH+), the deprotonation (C2H++H+), and the isomerization channel (CH2 ++C+) is studied systematically by pump (four 266 nm photons) probe (800nm) excitation.


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2015

Frequency domain optical parametric amplification

Bruno E. Schmidt; Nicolas Thiré; Philippe Lassonde; Ladan Arissian; Guilmot Ernotte; François Poitras; T. Ozaki; A. Laramée; Maxime Boivin; Heide Ibrahim; François Légaré

General restrictions arising from gain-narrowing and phase-matching are circumvented by employing parametric amplification in the frequency rather than the time domain. Frequency-domain OPA has been used for amplifying few-cycle pulses and for high gain amplification.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2015

Tabletop imaging using 266nm femtosecond laser pulses, for characterization of structural evolution in, single molecule, chemical reactions

Heide Ibrahim; Benji Wales; Samuel Beaulieu; Bruno E. Schmidt; Nicolas Thiré; Éric Bisson; C. T. Hebeisen; Vincent Wanie; Mathieu Giguère; Jean-Claude Kieffer; Michael Spanner; André D. Bandrauk; Michael S. Schuurman; Joseph Sanderson; François Légaré

We have demonstrated a generally applicable tabletop approach utilizing a 266nm femtosecond laser pulse pump, 800nm pulse probe, coupled with Coulomb explosion imaging (CEI). We have investigated two simple chemical reactions in C2H2+ simultaneously: proton transfer and C=C bond-breaking, triggered by multiphoton ionization to excited states. Too and fro proton migration results are in excellent agreement with new ab initio trajectory simulations which predict isomerization timescales and pathways.


International Conference on Ultrafast Phenomena (2010), paper WB2 | 2010

Wave Packet Reconstruction on Unknown Potential Surfaces by Two-Colour Non-Linear Wave Packet Interferometry

Heide Ibrahim; Craig T. Chapman; Hiroyuki Katsuki; Jeffrey A. Cina; Kenji Ohmori

The reconstruction of quantum mechanical states on weakly characterized potential energy surfaces by two-colour non-linear wave packet interferometry is presented and surveyed for the (well-known) model system Iodine in a jet.

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François Légaré

Institut national de la recherche scientifique

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Bruno E. Schmidt

Institut national de la recherche scientifique

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Philippe Lassonde

Institut national de la recherche scientifique

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Guilmot Ernotte

Institut national de la recherche scientifique

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Nicolas Thiré

Institut national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean-Claude Kieffer

Institut national de la recherche scientifique

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Roberto Morandotti

Institut national de la recherche scientifique

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Samuel Beaulieu

Institut national de la recherche scientifique

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Vincent Wanie

Institut national de la recherche scientifique

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