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Dive into the research topics where Hermann A. Dürr is active.

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Featured researches published by Hermann A. Dürr.


Nature Materials | 2013

Nanoscale spin reversal by non-local angular momentum transfer following ultrafast laser excitation in ferrimagnetic GdFeCo

Catherine Graves; A. H. Reid; Tianhan Wang; Benny Wu; S. de Jong; K. Vahaplar; I. Radu; David Bernstein; M. Messerschmidt; L. Müller; Ryan Coffee; Mina Bionta; Sascha W. Epp; Robert Hartmann; N. Kimmel; G. Hauser; A. Hartmann; P. Holl; H. Gorke; Johan H. Mentink; A. Tsukamoto; A. Fognini; J. J. Turner; W. F. Schlotter; D. Rolles; H. Soltau; L. Struder; Yves Acremann; A.V. Kimel; Andrei Kirilyuk

Ultrafast laser techniques have revealed extraordinary spin dynamics in magnetic materials that equilibrium descriptions of magnetism cannot explain. Particularly important for future applications is understanding non-equilibrium spin dynamics following laser excitation on the nanoscale, yet the limited spatial resolution of optical laser techniques has impeded such nanoscale studies. Here we present ultrafast diffraction experiments with an X-ray laser that probes the nanoscale spin dynamics following optical laser excitation in the ferrimagnetic alloy GdFeCo, which exhibits macroscopic all-optical switching. Our study reveals that GdFeCo displays nanoscale chemical and magnetic inhomogeneities that affect the spin dynamics. In particular, we observe Gd spin reversal in Gd-rich nanoregions within the first picosecond driven by the non-local transfer of angular momentum from larger adjacent Fe-rich nanoregions. These results suggest that a magnetic materials microstructure can be engineered to control transient laser-excited spins, potentially allowing faster (~ 1 ps) spin reversal than in present technologies.


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

X-ray pulse preserving single-shot optical cross-correlation method for improved experimental temporal resolution

M. Beye; O. Krupin; G. Hays; A. H. Reid; Daniela Rupp; S. de Jong; S. Lee; W. S. Lee; Yi-De Chuang; Ryan Coffee; James Cryan; J. M. Glownia; A. Föhlisch; M. R. Holmes; Alan Fry; William E. White; Christoph Bostedt; A. O. Scherz; Hermann A. Dürr; W. F. Schlotter

We measured the relative arrival time between an optical pulse and a soft x-ray pulse from a free-electron laser. This femtosecond cross-correlation measurement was achieved by observing the change in optical reflectivity induced through the absorption of a fraction of the x-ray pulse. The main x-ray pulse energy remained available for an independent pump-probe experiment where the sample may be opaque to soft x-rays. The method was employed to correct the two-pulse delay data from a canonical pump-probe experiment and demonstrate 130 ± 20 fs (FWHM) temporal resolution. We further analyze possible timing jitter sources and point to future improvements.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2015

Mega-electron-volt ultrafast electron diffraction at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

Stephen Weathersby; Garth Brown; Martin Centurion; T. Chase; Ryan Coffee; Jeff Corbett; John Eichner; J. Frisch; Alan Fry; Markus Gühr; Nick Hartmann; C. Hast; Robert Hettel; Renee K. Jobe; Erik N. Jongewaard; James Lewandowski; Renkai Li; Aaron M. Lindenberg; Igor Makasyuk; Justin E. May; D. McCormick; M. N. Nguyen; A. H. Reid; Xiaozhe Shen; Klaus Sokolowski-Tinten; T. Vecchione; Sharon Vetter; J. Wu; Jie Yang; Hermann A. Dürr

Ultrafast electron probes are powerful tools, complementary to x-ray free-electron lasers, used to study structural dynamics in material, chemical, and biological sciences. High brightness, relativistic electron beams with femtosecond pulse duration can resolve details of the dynamic processes on atomic time and length scales. SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory recently launched the Ultrafast Electron Diffraction (UED) and microscopy Initiative aiming at developing the next generation ultrafast electron scattering instruments. As the first stage of the Initiative, a mega-electron-volt (MeV) UED system has been constructed and commissioned to serve ultrafast science experiments and instrumentation development. The system operates at 120-Hz repetition rate with outstanding performance. In this paper, we report on the SLAC MeV UED system and its performance, including the reciprocal space resolution, temporal resolution, and machine stability.


Nature Materials | 2013

Speed limit of the insulator–metal transition in magnetite

S. de Jong; Roopali Kukreja; Christoph Trabant; N. Pontius; C. F. Chang; T. Kachel; M. Beye; F. Sorgenfrei; C. H. Back; Björn Bräuer; W. F. Schlotter; J. J. Turner; O. Krupin; M. Doehler; Diling Zhu; M. A. Hossain; Andreas Scherz; Daniele Fausti; Fabio Novelli; Martina Esposito; Wei-Sheng Lee; Yi-De Chuang; D. H. Lu; R. G. Moore; M. Yi; M. Trigo; Patrick S. Kirchmann; L. Pathey; M. S. Golden; M. Buchholz

As the oldest known magnetic material, magnetite (Fe3O4) has fascinated mankind for millennia. As the first oxide in which a relationship between electrical conductivity and fluctuating/localized electronic order was shown, magnetite represents a model system for understanding correlated oxides in general. Nevertheless, the exact mechanism of the insulator-metal, or Verwey, transition has long remained inaccessible. Recently, three-Fe-site lattice distortions called trimerons were identified as the characteristic building blocks of the low-temperature insulating electronically ordered phase. Here we investigate the Verwey transition with pump-probe X-ray diffraction and optical reflectivity techniques, and show how trimerons become mobile across the insulator-metal transition. We find this to be a two-step process. After an initial 300 fs destruction of individual trimerons, phase separation occurs on a 1.5±0.2 ps timescale to yield residual insulating and metallic regions. This work establishes the speed limit for switching in future oxide electronics.


Nano Letters | 2015

Dynamic Structural Response and Deformations of Monolayer MoS2 Visualized by Femtosecond Electron Diffraction

Ehren M. Mannebach; Renkai Li; Karel-Alexander N. Duerloo; Clara Nyby; Peter Zalden; T. Vecchione; Friederike Ernst; A. H. Reid; T. Chase; Xiaozhe Shen; Stephen Weathersby; C. Hast; Robert Hettel; Ryan Coffee; Nick Hartmann; Alan Fry; Yifei Yu; Linyou Cao; Tony F. Heinz; Evan J. Reed; Hermann A. Dürr; Xijie Wang; Aaron M. Lindenberg

Two-dimensional materials are subject to intrinsic and dynamic rippling that modulates their optoelectronic and electromechanical properties. Here, we directly visualize the dynamics of these processes within monolayer transition metal dichalcogenide MoS2 using femtosecond electron scattering techniques as a real-time probe with atomic-scale resolution. We show that optical excitation induces large-amplitude in-plane displacements and ultrafast wrinkling of the monolayer on nanometer length-scales, developing on picosecond time-scales. These deformations are associated with several percent peak strains that are fully reversible over tens of millions of cycles. Direct measurements of electron-phonon coupling times and the subsequent interfacial thermal heat flow between the monolayer and substrate are also obtained. These measurements, coupled with first-principles modeling, provide a new understanding of the dynamic structural processes that underlie the functionality of two-dimensional materials and open up new opportunities for ultrafast strain engineering using all-optical methods.


Physics Today | 2015

The future of electron microscopy

Yimei Zhu; Hermann A. Dürr

Modern transmission electron microscopes can image individual atoms and molecules. But to unlock new science, the next generation of instruments must look beyond just higher spatial resolution.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

Time-resolved resonant soft x-ray diffraction with free-electron lasers: Femtosecond dynamics across the Verwey transition in magnetite

N. Pontius; T. Kachel; C. Schüßler-Langeheine; W. F. Schlotter; Martin Beye; F. Sorgenfrei; C. F. Chang; A. Föhlisch; W. Wurth; P. Metcalf; I. Leonov; A. N. Yaresko; N. Stojanovic; M. Berglund; N. Guerassimova; S. Düsterer; H. Redlin; Hermann A. Dürr

Resonant soft x-ray diffraction (RSXD) with femtosecond (fs) time resolution is a powerful tool for disentangling the interplay between different degrees of freedom in strongly correlated electron materials. It allows addressing the coupling of particular degrees of freedom upon an external selective perturbation, e.g., by an optical or infrared laser pulse. Here, we report a time-resolved RSXD experiment from the prototypical correlated electron material magnetite using soft x-ray pulses from the free-electron laser FLASH in Hamburg. We observe ultrafast melting of the charge-orbital order leading to the formation of a transient phase, which has not been observed in equilibrium.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

Femtosecond X-ray magnetic circular dichroism absorption spectroscopy at an X-ray free electron laser

Daniel Higley; Konstantin Hirsch; Georgi L. Dakovski; Emmanuelle Jal; Edwin Yuan; TianMin Liu; Alberto Lutman; James P. MacArthur; Elke Arenholz; Zhao Chen; G. Coslovich; Peter Denes; Patrick Granitzka; P. Hart; Matthias C. Hoffmann; John Joseph; Loic Le Guyader; Ankush Mitra; Stefan Moeller; Hendrik Ohldag; Matthew D. Seaberg; Padraic Shafer; J. Stöhr; A. Tsukamoto; H.-D. Nuhn; A. H. Reid; Hermann A. Dürr; W. F. Schlotter

X-ray magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopy using an X-ray free electron laser is demonstrated with spectra over the Fe L(3,2)-edges. The high brightness of the X-ray free electron laser combined with high accuracy detection of incident and transmitted X-rays enables ultrafast X-ray magnetic circular dichroism studies of unprecedented sensitivity. This new capability is applied to a study of all-optical magnetic switching dynamics of Fe and Gd magnetic sublattices in a GdFeCo thin film above its magnetization compensation temperature.


Applied Physics Letters | 2016

Ultrafast electron diffraction from non-equilibrium phonons in femtosecond laser heated Au films

T. Chase; M. Trigo; A. H. Reid; Renkai Li; T. Vecchione; Xiaozhe Shen; Stephen Weathersby; Ryan Coffee; Nick Hartmann; David A. Reis; Xijie Wang; Hermann A. Dürr

We use ultrafast electron diffraction to detect the temporal evolution of non-equilibrium phonons in femtosecond laser-excited ultrathin single-crystalline gold films. From the time-dependence of the Debye-Waller factor, we extract a 4.7 ps time-constant for the increase in mean-square atomic displacements. The observed increase in the diffuse scattering intensity demonstrates that the energy transfer from laser-heated electrons to phonon modes near the X and K points in the Au fcc Brillouin zone proceeds with timescales of 2.3 and 2.9 ps, respectively, faster than the Debye-Waller average mean-square displacement.


Physical Review B | 2016

Generation mechanism of terahertz coherent acoustic phonons in Fe

T. Henighan; M. Trigo; Stefano Bonetti; Patrick Granitzka; D. Higley; Zhao Chen; M. P. Jiang; Roopali Kukreja; A. X. Gray; A. H. Reid; Emmanuelle Jal; Matthias C. Hoffmann; M. Kozina; Sanghoon Song; Matthieu Chollet; Diling Zhu; Pengfa Xu; Jaewoo Jeong; Karel Carva; Pablo Maldonado; Peter M. Oppeneer; Mahesh G. Samant; S. S. P. Parkin; David A. Reis; Hermann A. Dürr

T Henighan1,2,∗ M Trigo, S Bonetti, P Granitzka, D Higley, Z Chen, M P Jiang, R Kukreja, A Gray, A H Reid, E Jal, M C Hoffmann, M Kozina, S Song, M Chollet, D Zhu, P F Xu, J Jeong, K Carva, P Maldonado, P M Oppeneer, M G Samant, S S P. Parkin, D A Reis, and H A Dürr3† PULSE Institute, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, Menlo Park, California, USA Physics Department, Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA Stanford Institute for Materials and Energy Sciences, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, 2575 Sand Hill Road, Menlo Park, CA 94025. Van der Waals-Zeeman Institute, University of Amsterdam, 1018XE Amsterdam, The Netherlands Department of Photon Science and Applied Physics, Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA Linac Coherent Light Source, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, Menlo Park, California, USA IBM Almaden Research Center, 650 Harry Road, San Jose, California 95120, USA Max-Planck Institute for Microstructure Physics, 06120 Halle (Saale), Germany Charles University, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Department of Condensed Matter Physics, Ke Karlovu 5, CZ-12116 Prague 2, Czech Republic and Department of Physics and Astronomy, Uppsala University, P. O. Box 516, S-75120 Uppsala, Sweden (Dated: September 14, 2015)

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A. H. Reid

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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T. Chase

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Ryan Coffee

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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W. F. Schlotter

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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