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Dive into the research topics where Qingteng Zhang is active.

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Featured researches published by Qingteng Zhang.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Giant optical enhancement of strain gradient in ferroelectric BiFeO3 thin films and its physical origin

Yuelin Li; Carolina Adamo; Pice Chen; Paul G. Evans; Serge M. Nakhmanson; William D. Parker; Clare E. Rowland; Richard D. Schaller; Darrell G. Schlom; Donald A. Walko; Haidan Wen; Qingteng Zhang

Through mapping of the spatiotemporal strain profile in ferroelectric BiFeO3 epitaxial thin films, we report an optically initiated dynamic enhancement of the strain gradient of 105–106 m−1 that lasts up to a few ns depending on the film thickness. Correlating with transient optical absorption measurements, the enhancement of the strain gradient is attributed to a piezoelectric effect driven by a transient screening field mediated by excitons. These findings not only demonstrate a new possible way of controlling the flexoelectric effect, but also reveal the important role of exciton dynamics in photostriction and photovoltaic effects in ferroelectrics.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Mesoscopic structural phase progression in photo-excited VO2 revealed by time-resolved x-ray diffraction microscopy

Yi Zhu; Zhonghou Cai; Pice Chen; Qingteng Zhang; M. J. Highland; Il Woong Jung; Donald A. Walko; Eric M. Dufresne; Jaewoo Jeong; Mahesh G. Samant; Stuart S. P. Parkin; J. W. Freeland; Paul G. Evans; Haidan Wen

Dynamical phase separation during a solid-solid phase transition poses a challenge for understanding the fundamental processes in correlated materials. Critical information underlying a phase transition, such as localized phase competition, is difficult to reveal by measurements that are spatially averaged over many phase separated regions. The ability to simultaneously track the spatial and temporal evolution of such systems is essential to understanding mesoscopic processes during a phase transition. Using state-of-the-art time-resolved hard x-ray diffraction microscopy, we directly visualize the structural phase progression in a VO2 film upon photoexcitation. Following a homogenous in-plane optical excitation, the phase transformation is initiated at discrete sites and completed by the growth of one lattice structure into the other, instead of a simultaneous isotropic lattice symmetry change. The time-dependent x-ray diffraction spatial maps show that the in-plane phase progression in laser-superheated VO2 is via a displacive lattice transformation as a result of relaxation from an excited monoclinic phase into a rutile phase. The speed of the phase front progression is quantitatively measured, and is faster than the process driven by in-plane thermal diffusion but slower than the sound speed in VO2. The direct visualization of localized structural changes in the time domain opens a new avenue to study mesoscopic processes in driven systems.


Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2016

Submillisecond X-ray photon correlation spectroscopy from a pixel array detector with fast dual gating and no readout dead-time

Qingteng Zhang; Eric M. Dufresne; P. Grybos; Piotr Kmon; P. Maj; Suresh Narayanan; G. Deptuch; R. Szczygiel; Alec Sandy

X-ray photon correlation spectroscopy is performed using a dual counter pixel array detector at a frame rate of 11.8 kHz with no readout dead-time.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2015

Spatially confined low-power optically pumped ultrafast synchrotron x-ray nanodiffraction

Joonkyu Park; Qingteng Zhang; Pice Chen; Margaret P. Cosgriff; J. A. Tilka; Carolina Adamo; Darrell G. Schlom; Haidan Wen; Yi Zhu; Paul G. Evans

The combination of ultrafast optical excitation and time-resolved synchrotron x-ray nanodiffraction provides unique insight into the photoinduced dynamics of materials, with the spatial resolution required to probe individual nanostructures or small volumes within heterogeneous materials. Optically excited x-ray nanobeam experiments are challenging because the high total optical power required for experimentally relevant optical fluences leads to mechanical instability due to heating. For a given fluence, tightly focusing the optical excitation reduces the average optical power by more than three orders of magnitude and thus ensures sufficient thermal stability for x-ray nanobeam studies. Delivering optical pulses via a scannable fiber-coupled optical objective provides a well-defined excitation geometry during rotation and translation of the sample and allows the selective excitation of isolated areas within the sample. Experimental studies of the photoinduced lattice dynamics of a 35 nm BiFeO3 thin film on a SrTiO3 substrate demonstrate the potential to excite and probe nanoscale volumes.


Optics Express | 2016

Pushing x-ray photon correlation spectroscopy beyond the continuous frame rate limit

Eric M. Dufresne; Suresh Narayanan; Alec Sandy; David Kline; Qingteng Zhang; Eric C. Landahl; Steve Ross

We demonstrate delayed-frame X-ray Photon Correlation Spectroscopy with 120 microsecond time resolution, limited only by sample scattering rates, with a prototype Pixel-array detector capable of taking two image frames separated by 153 ns or less. Although the overall frame rate is currently limited to about 4 frame pairs per second, we easily measured millisecond correlation functions. This technology, coupled to the use of brighter synchrotrons such as Petra III or the NSLS-II should enable X-ray Photon Correlation Spectroscopy on microsecond time scales on a wider variety of materials.


New Journal of Physics | 2013

Depolarizing field in temperature-graded ferroelectrics from an atomistic viewpoint

Qingteng Zhang; I. Ponomareva

An atomistic approach for computing the depolarizing, or internal, electric field in materials with inhomogeneous polarization is developed. Application of the approach for studying the depolarizing fields in technologically important (Ba0.7Sr0.3)TiO3 ferroelectric alloy with temperature gradients has revealed the intrinsic features of these fields as well as their role in the establishment of polarization gradients. It is found that the depolarizing fields are inhomogeneous and can be tailored to yield both zero and non-vanishing potential drops. Such findings could pave the way to unusual thermoelectric materials, photovoltaics and locally conducting materials, all of which are at the frontier of current research.


Nanoscale | 2018

Domain alignment within ferroelectric/dielectric PbTiO3/SrTiO3 superlattice nanostructures

Joonkyu Park; John Mangeri; Qingteng Zhang; M. Humed Yusuf; Anastasios Pateras; Matthew Dawber; Martin Holt; Olle Heinonen; Serge M. Nakhmanson; Paul G. Evans

The ferroelectric domain pattern within lithographically defined PbTiO3/SrTiO3 ferroelectric/dielectric heteroepitaxial superlattice nanostructures is strongly influenced by the edges of the structures. Synchrotron X-ray nanobeam diffraction reveals that the spontaneously formed 180° ferroelectric stripe domains exhibited by such superlattices adopt a configuration in rectangular nanostructures in which domain walls are aligned with long patterned edges. The angular distribution of X-ray diffuse scattering intensity from nanodomains indicates that domains are aligned within an angular range of approximately 20° with respect to the edges. Computational studies based on a time-dependent Landau-Ginzburg-Devonshire model show that the preferred direction of the alignment results from lowering of the bulk and electrostrictive contributions to the free energy of the system due to the release of the lateral mechanical constraint. This unexpected alignment appears to be intrinsic and not a result of distortions or defects caused by the patterning process. Our work demonstrates how nanostructuring and patterning of heteroepitaxial superlattices allow for pathways to create and control ferroelectric structures that may appear counterintuitive.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Dynamic Scaling of Colloidal Gel Formation at Intermediate Concentrations

Qingteng Zhang; Divya Bahadur; Eric M. Dufresne; P. Grybos; Piotr Kmon; Robert L. Leheny; P. Maj; Suresh Narayanan; R. Szczygiel; Subramanian Ramakrishnan; Alec Sandy

We have examined the formation and dissolution of gels composed of intermediate volume-fraction nanoparticles with temperature-dependent short-range attractions using small-angle x-ray scattering, x-ray photon correlation spectroscopy, and rheology to obtain nanoscale and macroscale sensitivity to structure and dynamics. Gel formation after temperature quenches to the vicinity of the rheologically determined gel temperature, T_{gel}, was characterized via the slowdown of dynamics and changes in microstructure observed in the intensity autocorrelation functions and structure factor, respectively, as a function of quench depth (ΔT=T_{quench}-T_{gel}), wave vector, and formation time t_{f}. We find the wave-vector-dependent dynamics, microstructure, and rheology at a particular ΔT and t_{f} map to those at other ΔTs and t_{f}s via an effective scaling temperature, T_{s}. A single T_{s} applies to a broad range of ΔT and t_{f} but does depend on the particle size. The rate of formation implied by the scaling is a far stronger function of ΔT than expected from the attraction strength between colloids. We interpret this strong temperature dependence in terms of cooperative bonding required to form stable gels via energetically favored, local structures.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Photoinduced Domain Pattern Transformation in Ferroelectric-Dielectric Superlattices

Youngjun Ahn; Joonkyu Park; Anastasios Pateras; Matthew Rich; Qingteng Zhang; Pice Chen; Mohammed Humed Yusuf; Haidan Wen; Matthew Dawber; Paul G. Evans

The nanodomain pattern in ferroelectric-dielectric superlattices transforms to a uniform polarization state under above-band-gap optical excitation. X-ray scattering reveals a disappearance of domain diffuse scattering and an expansion of the lattice. The reappearance of the domain pattern occurs over a period of seconds at room temperature, suggesting a transformation mechanism in which charge carriers in long-lived trap states screen the depolarization field. A Landau-Ginzburg-Devonshire model predicts changes in lattice parameter and a critical carrier concentration for the transformation.


International Conference on Ultrafast Phenomena (2016), paper UW2A.1 | 2016

Ultrafast atomic-scale structural response in monolayer and multilayer transition metal dichalcogenides

Ehren M. Mannebach; I-Cheng Tung; Clara Nyby; Hua Zhou; Qingteng Zhang; Friederike Ernst; Kyle Seyler; Genevieve Clark; Yu Lin; Diling Zhu; James M. Glownia; M. Kozina; Sanghoon Song; S. Nelson; Yifei Yu; Anupum Pant; Archana Raja; Yinsheng Guo; Anthony D. DiChiara; Wendy L. Mao; Linyou Cao; Sefaattin Tongay; Tony F. Heinz; Xiaodong Xu; Haidan Wen; Aaron M. Lindenberg

Femtosecond x-ray studies of 2D transition metal dichalcogenide films reveal ultrafast in-plane and out-of-plane responses, including compression of the out-of-plane lattice spacing, structure factor modulations, and in-plane dynamics occurring on few picosecond time-scales.

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Paul G. Evans

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Pice Chen

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Eric M. Dufresne

Argonne National Laboratory

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Haidan Wen

Argonne National Laboratory

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Alec Sandy

Argonne National Laboratory

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Zhonghou Cai

Argonne National Laboratory

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Joonkyu Park

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Margaret P. Cosgriff

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Suresh Narayanan

Argonne National Laboratory

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