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Dive into the research topics where O. Krupin is active.

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Featured researches published by O. Krupin.


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 | 2012

The soft x-ray instrument for materials studies at the linac coherent light source x-ray free-electron laser.

W. F. Schlotter; J. J. Turner; Michael Rowen; P. A. Heimann; Michael Holmes; O. Krupin; M. Messerschmidt; Stefan Moeller; J. Krzywinski; Regina Soufli; Mónica Fernández-Perea; N. Kelez; Sooheyong Lee; Ryan Coffee; G. Hays; M. Beye; N. Gerken; F. Sorgenfrei; Stefan P. Hau-Riege; L. Juha; J. Chalupsky; V. Hajkova; Adrian P. Mancuso; A. Singer; O. Yefanov; I. A. Vartanyants; Guido Cadenazzi; Brian Abbey; Keith A. Nugent; H. Sinn

The soft x-ray materials science instrument is the second operational beamline at the linac coherent light source x-ray free electron laser. The instrument operates with a photon energy range of 480-2000 eV and features a grating monochromator as well as bendable refocusing mirrors. A broad range of experimental stations may be installed to study diverse scientific topics such as: ultrafast chemistry, surface science, highly correlated electron systems, matter under extreme conditions, and laboratory astrophysics. Preliminary commissioning results are presented including the first soft x-ray single-shot energy spectrum from a free electron laser.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2011

Linac Coherent Light Source soft x-ray materials science instrument optical design and monochromator commissioning

Philip A. Heimann; O. Krupin; W. F. Schlotter; J. J. Turner; J. Krzywinski; F. Sorgenfrei; Marc Messerschmidt; David Bernstein; J. Chalupský; Vera Hájková; Stefan P. Hau-Riege; Michael Holmes; L. Juha; Nicholas Kelez; Jan Lüning; Dennis Nordlund; Monica Fernandez Perea; Andreas Scherz; Regina Soufli; W. Wurth; Michael Rowen

We present the x-ray optical design of the soft x-ray materials science instrument at the Linac Coherent Light Source, consisting of a varied line-spaced grating monochromator and Kirkpatrick-Baez refocusing optics. Results from the commissioning of the monochromator are shown. A resolving power of 3000 was achieved, which is within a factor of two of the design goal.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Femtosecond Dynamics of the Collinear-to-Spiral Antiferromagnetic Phase Transition in CuO

S. L. Johnson; R. A. De Souza; U. Staub; P. Beaud; E. Möhr-Vorobeva; G. Ingold; A. Caviezel; V. Scagnoli; W. F. Schlotter; J. J. Turner; O. Krupin; W. S. Lee; Yi-De Chuang; L. Patthey; R. G. Moore; D. H. Lu; M. Yi; Patrick S. Kirchmann; M. Trigo; Peter Denes; Dionisio Doering; Z. Hussain; Zhi-Xun Shen; D. Prabhakaran; A. T. Boothroyd

We report on the ultrafast dynamics of magnetic order in a single crystal of CuO at a temperature of 207 K in response to strong optical excitation using femtosecond resonant x-ray diffraction. In the experiment, a femtosecond laser pulse induces a sudden, nonequilibrium increase in magnetic disorder. After a short delay ranging from 400 fs to 2 ps, we observe changes in the relative intensity of the magnetic ordering diffraction peaks that indicate a shift from a collinear commensurate phase to a spiral incommensurate phase. These results indicate that the ultimate speed for this antiferromagnetic reorientation transition in CuO is limited by the long-wavelength magnetic excitation connecting the two phases.


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.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2014

Atomic-scale perspective of ultrafast charge transfer at a dye-semiconductor interface

Katrin R. Siefermann; C. D. Pemmaraju; Stefan Neppl; Andrey Shavorskiy; Amy A. Cordones; Josh Vura-Weis; Daniel Slaughter; Felix Sturm; Fabian Weise; Hendrik Bluhm; Matthew L. Strader; Hana Cho; Ming Fu Lin; Camila Bacellar; Champak Khurmi; Jinghua Guo; G. Coslovich; Robert A. Kaindl; Robert W. Schoenlein; A. Belkacem; Daniel M. Neumark; Stephen R. Leone; Dennis Nordlund; Hirohito Ogasawara; O. Krupin; J. J. Turner; W. F. Schlotter; Michael R. Holmes; Marc Messerschmidt; Michael P. Minitti

Understanding interfacial charge-transfer processes on the atomic level is crucial to support the rational design of energy-challenge relevant systems such as solar cells, batteries, and photocatalysts. A femtosecond time-resolved core-level photoelectron spectroscopy study is performed that probes the electronic structure of the interface between ruthenium-based N3 dye molecules and ZnO nanocrystals within the first picosecond after photoexcitation and from the unique perspective of the Ru reporter atom at the center of the dye. A transient chemical shift of the Ru 3d inner-shell photolines by (2.3 ± 0.2) eV to higher binding energies is observed 500 fs after photoexcitation of the dye. The experimental results are interpreted with the aid of ab initio calculations using constrained density functional theory. Strong indications for the formation of an interfacial charge-transfer state are presented, providing direct insight into a transient electronic configuration that may limit the efficiency of photoinduced free charge-carrier generation.


Optics Express | 2012

Temporal cross-correlation of x-ray free electron and optical lasers using soft x-ray pulse induced transient reflectivity.

O. Krupin; M. Trigo; W. F. Schlotter; Martin Beye; F. Sorgenfrei; J. J. Turner; David A. Reis; N. Gerken; Sooheyong Lee; W. S. Lee; G. Hays; Yves Acremann; Brian Abbey; Ryan Coffee; Marc Messerschmidt; Stefan P. Hau-Riege; G. Lapertot; Jan Lüning; P. A. Heimann; Regina Soufli; Mónica Fernández-Perea; Michael Rowen; Michael Holmes; S. L. Molodtsov; A. Föhlisch; W. Wurth

The recent development of x-ray free electron lasers providing coherent, femtosecond-long pulses of high brilliance and variable energy opens new areas of scientific research in a variety of disciplines such as physics, chemistry, and biology. Pump-probe experimental techniques which observe the temporal evolution of systems after optical or x-ray pulse excitation are one of the main experimental schemes currently in use for ultrafast studies. The key challenge in these experiments is to reliably achieve temporal and spatial overlap of the x-ray and optical pulses. Here we present measurements of the x-ray pulse induced transient change of optical reflectivity from a variety of materials covering the soft x-ray photon energy range from 500eV to 2000eV and outline the use of this technique to establish and characterize temporal synchronization of the optical-laser and FEL x-ray pulses.


Nature Communications | 2012

Phase fluctuations and the absence of topological defects in a photo-excited charge-ordered nickelate

W. S. Lee; Yi-De Chuang; R. G. Moore; Yiwen Zhu; L. Patthey; M. Trigo; D. H. Lu; Patrick S. Kirchmann; O. Krupin; M. Yi; M. C. Langner; Nils Huse; Y. Chen; Shuyun Zhou; G. Coslovich; Bernhard Huber; David A. Reis; Robert A. Kaindl; Robert W. Schoenlein; D. Doering; Peter Denes; W. F. Schlotter; J. J. Turner; S. L. Johnson; Michael Först; T. Sasagawa; Y. F. Kung; A. P. Sorini; A. F. Kemper; Brian Moritz

The dynamics of an order parameters amplitude and phase determines the collective behaviour of novel states emerging in complex materials. Time- and momentum-resolved pump-probe spectroscopy, by virtue of measuring material properties at atomic and electronic time scales out of equilibrium, can decouple entangled degrees of freedom by visualizing their corresponding dynamics in the time domain. Here we combine time-resolved femotosecond optical and resonant X-ray diffraction measurements on charge ordered La(1.75)Sr(0.25)NiO(4) to reveal unforeseen photoinduced phase fluctuations of the charge order parameter. Such fluctuations preserve long-range order without creating topological defects, distinct from thermal phase fluctuations near the critical temperature in equilibrium. Importantly, relaxation of the phase fluctuations is found to be an order of magnitude slower than that of the order parameters amplitude fluctuations, and thus limits charge order recovery. This new aspect of phase fluctuations provides a more holistic view of the phases importance in ordering phenomena of quantum matter.


Optics Express | 2014

Absolute pulse energy measurements of soft x-rays at the Linac Coherent Light Source

Kai Tiedtke; Andrey Sorokin; Ulf Jastrow; P. Juranić; Svea Kreis; N. Gerken; M. Richter; Uwe Arp; Yiping Feng; Dennis Nordlund; Regina Soufli; Mónica Fernández-Perea; L. Juha; Philip A. Heimann; B. Nagler; Hae Ja Lee; S. Mack; Marco Cammarata; O. Krupin; Marc Messerschmidt; Michael Holmes; Michael Rowen; W. F. Schlotter; Stefan Moeller; J. J. Turner

This paper reports novel measurements of x-ray optical radiation on an absolute scale from the intense and ultra-short radiation generated in the soft x-ray regime of a free electron laser. We give a brief description of the detection principle for radiation measurements which was specifically adapted for this photon energy range. We present data characterizing the soft x-ray instrument at the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) with respect to the radiant power output and transmission by using an absolute detector temporarily placed at the downstream end of the instrument. This provides an estimation of the reflectivity of all x-ray optical elements in the beamline and provides the absolute photon number per bandwidth per pulse. This parameter is important for many experiments that need to understand the trade-offs between high energy resolution and high flux, such as experiments focused on studying materials via resonant processes. Furthermore, the results are compared with the LCLS diagnostic gas detectors to test the limits of linearity, and observations are reported on radiation contamination from spontaneous undulator radiation and higher harmonic content.


Structural Dynamics | 2015

Vacuum space charge effects in sub-picosecond soft X-ray photoemission on a molecular adsorbate layer

M. Dell'Angela; Toyli Anniyev; Martin Beye; Ryan Coffee; A. Föhlisch; Jörgen Gladh; Sarp Kaya; Tetsuo Katayama; O. Krupin; Anders Nilsson; Dennis Nordlund; W. F. Schlotter; Jonas A. Sellberg; F. Sorgenfrei; J. J. Turner; Henrik Öström; Hirohito Ogasawara; Martin Wolf; W. Wurth

Vacuum space charge induced kinetic energy shifts of O 1s and Ru 3d core levels in femtosecond soft X-ray photoemission spectra (PES) have been studied at a free electron laser (FEL) for an oxygen layer on Ru(0001). We fully reproduced the measurements by simulating the in-vacuum expansion of the photoelectrons and demonstrate the space charge contribution of the high-order harmonics in the FEL beam. Employing the same analysis for 400 nm pump-X-ray probe PES, we can disentangle the delay dependent Ru 3d energy shifts into effects induced by space charge and by lattice heating from the femtosecond pump pulse.

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J. J. Turner

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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W. F. Schlotter

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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M. Trigo

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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W. S. Lee

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Yi-De Chuang

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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R. G. Moore

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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D. H. Lu

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Dennis Nordlund

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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M. Yi

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Patrick S. Kirchmann

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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