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Dive into the research topics where Hyun Soon Park is active.

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Featured researches published by Hyun Soon Park.


Science | 2008

4D Imaging of Transient Structures and Morphologies in Ultrafast Electron Microscopy

Brett Barwick; Hyun Soon Park; Oh-Hoon Kwon; J. Spencer Baskin; Ahmed H. Zewail

With advances in spatial resolution reaching the atomic scale, two-dimensional (2D) and 3D imaging in electron microscopy has become an essential methodology in various fields of study. Here, we report 4D imaging, with in situ spatiotemporal resolutions, in ultrafast electron microscopy (UEM). The ability to capture selected-area-image dynamics with pixel resolution and to control the time separation between pulses for temporal cooling of the specimen made possible studies of fleeting structures and morphologies. We demonstrate the potential for applications with two examples, gold and graphite. For gold, after thermally induced stress, we determined the atomic structural expansion, the nonthermal lattice temperature, and the ultrafast transients of warping/bulging. In contrast, in graphite, striking coherent transients of the structure were observed in both image and diffraction, directly measuring, on the nanoscale, the longitudinal resonance period governed by Youngs elastic modulus. The success of these studies demonstrates the promise of UEM in real-space imaging of dynamics.


Nano Letters | 2012

Real-Space Observation of Skyrmion Lattice in Helimagnet MnSi Thin Samples

Akira Tonomura; Xiuzhen Yu; Keiichi Yanagisawa; Tsuyoshi Matsuda; Y. Onose; Naoya Kanazawa; Hyun Soon Park; Yoshinori Tokura

Observing and characterizing the spin distributions on a nanometer scale are of vital importance for understanding nanomagnetism and its application to spintronics. The magnetic structure in MnSi thin samples prepared from a bulk, which undergoes a transition from a helix to a skyrmion lattice, was investigated by in situ observation using Lorentz microscopy. Stripe domains were observed at zero applied field below 22.5 K. A skyrmion lattice with 6-fold symmetry in real space appeared when a field of 0.18 T was applied normal to the film plane. The lattice constant was estimated to be 18 nm, almost identical to the helical period. In comparison with the marginally stable skyrmion phase in a bulk sample, the skyrmion phase was stable over a wide range of temperatures and magnetic fields in the thin samples.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2014

Observation of the magnetic flux and three-dimensional structure of skyrmion lattices by electron holography

Hyun Soon Park; Xiuzhen Yu; Shinji Aizawa; Toshiaki Tanigaki; Tetsuya Akashi; Yoshio Takahashi; Tsuyoshi Matsuda; Naoya Kanazawa; Y. Onose; Daisuke Shindo; Akira Tonomura; Yoshinori Tokura

Skyrmions are nanoscale spin textures that are viewed as promising candidates as information carriers in future spintronic devices. Skyrmions have been observed using neutron scattering and microscopy techniques. Real-space imaging using electrons is a straightforward way to interpret spin configurations by detecting the phase shifts due to electromagnetic fields. Here, we report the first observation by electron holography of the magnetic flux and the three-dimensional spin configuration of a skyrmion lattice in Fe(0.5)Co(0.5)Si thin samples. The magnetic flux inside and outside a skyrmion was directly visualized and the handedness of the magnetic flux flow was found to be dependent on the direction of the applied magnetic field. The electron phase shifts φ in the helical and skyrmion phases were determined using samples with a stepped thickness t (from 55 nm to 510 nm), revealing a linear relationship (φ = 0.00173 t). The phase measurements were used to estimate the three-dimensional structures of both the helical and skyrmion phases, demonstrating that electron holography is a useful tool for studying complex magnetic structures and for three-dimensional, real-space mapping of magnetic fields.


Nano Letters | 2009

Direct Observation of Martensitic Phase-Transformation Dynamics in Iron by 4D Single-Pulse Electron Microscopy

Hyun Soon Park; Oh-Hoon Kwon; J. Spencer Baskin; Brett Barwick; Ahmed H. Zewail

The in situ martensitic phase transformation of iron, a complex solid-state transition involving collective atomic displacement and interface movement, is studied in real time by means of four-dimensional (4D) electron microscopy. The iron nanofilm specimen is heated at a maximum rate of approximately 10(11) K/s by a single heating pulse, and the evolution of the phase transformation from body-centered cubic to face-centered cubic crystal structure is followed by means of single-pulse, selected-area diffraction and real-space imaging. Two distinct components are revealed in the evolution of the crystal structure. The first, on the nanosecond time scale, is a direct martensitic transformation, which proceeds in regions heated into the temperature range of stability of the fcc phase, 1185-1667 K. The second, on the microsecond time scale, represents an indirect process for the hottest central zone of laser heating, where the temperature is initially above 1667 K and cooling is the rate-determining step. The mechanism of the direct transformation involves two steps, that of (barrier-crossing) nucleation on the reported nanosecond time scale, followed by a rapid grain growth typically in approximately 100 ps for 10 nm crystallites.


Nano Letters | 2010

4D Lorentz electron microscopy imaging: magnetic domain wall nucleation, reversal, and wave velocity.

Hyun Soon Park; J. Spencer Baskin; Ahmed H. Zewail

Magnetization reversal is an important topic of research in the fields of both basic and applied ferromagnetism. For the study of magnetization reversal dynamics and magnetic domain wall (DW) motion in ferromagnetic thin films, imaging techniques are indispensable. Here, we report 4D imaging of DWs by the out-of-focus Fresnel method in Lorentz ultrafast electron microscopy (UEM), with in situ spatial and temporal resolutions. The temporal change in magnetization, as revealed by changes in image contrast, is clocked using an impulsive optical field to produce structural deformation of the specimen, thus modulating magnetic field components in the specimen plane. Directly visualized are DW nucleation and subsequent annihilation and oscillatory reappearance (periods of 32 and 45 ns) in nickel films on two different substrates. For the case of Ni films on a Ti/Si(3)N(4) substrate, under conditions of minimum residual external magnetic field, the oscillation is associated with a unique traveling wave train of periodic magnetization reversal. The velocity of DW propagation in this wave train is measured to be 172 m/s with a wavelength of 7.8 microm. The success of this study demonstrates the promise of Lorentz UEM for real-space imaging of spin switching, ferromagnetic resonance, and laser-induced demagnetization in ferromagnetic nanostructures.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2015

Large anisotropic deformation of skyrmions in strained crystal

K. Shibata; Junichi Iwasaki; Naoya Kanazawa; Shinji Aizawa; Toshiaki Tanigaki; Manabu Shirai; Taro Nakajima; Masashi Kubota; Masashi Kawasaki; Hyun Soon Park; Daisuke Shindo; Naoto Nagaosa; Yoshinori Tokura

Mechanical control of magnetism is an important and promising approach in spintronics. To date, strain control has mostly been demonstrated in ferromagnetic structures by exploiting a change in magnetocrystalline anisotropy. It would be desirable to achieve large strain effects on magnetic nanostructures. Here, using in situ Lorentz transmission electron microscopy, we demonstrate that anisotropic strain as small as 0.3% in a chiral magnet of FeGe induces very large deformations in magnetic skyrmions, as well as distortions of the skyrmion crystal lattice on the order of 20%. Skyrmions are stabilized by the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction, originating from a chiral crystal structure. Our results show that the change in the modulation of the strength of this interaction is amplified by two orders of magnitude with respect to changes in the crystal lattice due to an applied strain. Our findings may provide a mechanism to achieve strain control of topological magnetic structures based on the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

4D visualization of embryonic, structural crystallization by single-pulse microscopy.

Oh-Hoon Kwon; Brett Barwick; Hyun Soon Park; J. Spencer Baskin; Ahmed H. Zewail

In many physical and biological systems the transition from an amorphous to ordered native structure involves complex energy landscapes, and understanding such transformations requires not only their thermodynamics but also the structural dynamics during the process. Here, we extend our 4D visualization method with electron imaging to include the study of irreversible processes with a single pulse in the same ultrafast electron microscope (UEM) as used before in the single-electron mode for the study of reversible processes. With this augmentation, we report on the transformation of amorphous to crystalline structure with silicon as an example. A single heating pulse was used to initiate crystallization from the amorphous phase while a single packet of electrons imaged selectively in space the transformation as the structure continuously changes with time. From the evolution of crystallinity in real time and the changes in morphology, for nanosecond and femtosecond pulse heating, we describe two types of processes, one that occurs at early time and involves a nondiffusive motion and another that takes place on a longer time scale. Similar mechanisms of two distinct time scales may perhaps be important in biomolecular folding.


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

Split-illumination electron holography

Toshiaki Tanigaki; Yoshikatsu Inada; Shinji Aizawa; Takahiro Suzuki; Hyun Soon Park; Tsuyoshi Matsuda; Akira Taniyama; Daisuke Shindo; Akira Tonomura

We developed a split-illumination electron holography that uses an electron biprism in the illuminating system and two biprisms (applicable to one biprism) in the imaging system, enabling holographic interference micrographs of regions far from the sample edge to be obtained. Using a condenser biprism, we split an electron wave into two coherent electron waves: one wave is to illuminate an observation area far from the sample edge in the sample plane and the other wave to pass through a vacuum space outside the sample. The split-illumination holography has the potential to greatly expand the breadth of applications of electron holography.


Applied Physics Letters | 2003

Behavior of magnetic domains during structural transformations in Ni2MnGa ferromagnetic shape memory alloy

Hyun Soon Park; Yasukazu Murakami; Daisuke Shindo; V.A. Chernenko; T. Kanomata

Change in the magnetic domain structure of Ni2MnGa Heusler alloy with the structural transformation from the parent phase to the intermediate phase and subsequent transformation to the martensite was studied by in situ observations using Lorentz microscopy and electron holography. Both the parent phase and the intermediate phase showed peculiar stripe magnetic domains, and the observed magnetization distribution was similar to each other. In contrast, the magnetization distribution was dramatically modified by the transformation to the tetragonal martensite. The observation appears to indicate that the magnetization distribution in the parent phase can interact with the short-wave lattice distortions to generate the intermediate phase, via the magnetoelastic interaction, resulting in the inheritance of the original magnetization distribution into the intermediate phase.


Nano Letters | 2015

Real-Space Observation of Short-Period Cubic Lattice of Skyrmions in MnGe.

Toshiaki Tanigaki; K. Shibata; Naoya Kanazawa; Xiuzhen Yu; Y. Onose; Hyun Soon Park; Daisuke Shindo; Yoshinori Tokura

Three-dimensional forms of skyrmion aggregate, such as a cubic lattice of skyrmions, are anticipated to exist, yet their direct observations remain elusive. Here, we report real-space observations of spin configurations of the skyrmion-antiskyrmion cubic-lattice in MnGe with a very short period (∼3 nm) and hence endowed with the largest skyrmion number density. The skyrmion lattices parallel to the {100} atomic lattices are directly observed using high-resolution Lorentz transmission electron microscopes, simultaneously with underlying atomic-lattice fringes.

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Ahmed H. Zewail

California Institute of Technology

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J. Spencer Baskin

California Institute of Technology

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Oh-Hoon Kwon

California Institute of Technology

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Brett Barwick

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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