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Dive into the research topics where Roman Mankowsky is active.

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Featured researches published by Roman Mankowsky.


Nature Materials | 2015

Spatially resolved ultrafast magnetic dynamics initiated at a complex oxide heterointerface

Michael Först; A. D. Caviglia; Raoul Scherwitzl; Roman Mankowsky; Pavlo Zubko; Vikaran Khanna; Hubertus Bromberger; S. B. Wilkins; Y.-D. Chuang; W. S. Lee; W. F. Schlotter; J. J. Turner; Georgi L. Dakovski; Michael P. Minitti; Stephen Clark; Dieter Jaksch; Jean-Marc Triscone; J. P. Hill; S. S. Dhesi; Andrea Cavalleri

Static strain in complex oxide heterostructures has been extensively used to engineer electronic and magnetic properties at equilibrium. In the same spirit, deformations of the crystal lattice with light may be used to achieve functional control across heterointerfaces dynamically. Here, by exciting large-amplitude infrared-active vibrations in a LaAlO3 substrate we induce magnetic order melting in a NdNiO3 film across a heterointerface. Femtosecond resonant soft X-ray diffraction is used to determine the spatiotemporal evolution of the magnetic disordering. We observe a magnetic melt front that propagates from the substrate interface into the film, at a speed that suggests electronically driven motion. Light control and ultrafast phase front propagation at heterointerfaces may lead to new opportunities in optomagnetism, for example by driving domain wall motion to transport information across suitably designed devices.


Nature Materials | 2016

Ultrafast energy- and momentum-resolved dynamics of magnetic correlations in the photo-doped Mott insulator Sr2IrO4

M. P. M. Dean; Yue Cao; X. Liu; Simon Wall; Diling Zhu; Roman Mankowsky; V. Thampy; X. M. Chen; J. G. Vale; D. Casa; Jungho Kim; Ayman Said; P. Juhas; Roberto Alonso-Mori; James M. Glownia; Marcin Sikorski; Sanghoon Song; M. Kozina; Henrik T. Lemke; L. Patthey; Shigeki Owada; Tetsuo Katayama; Makina Yabashi; Yoshikazu Tanaka; Tadashi Togashi; Jian Liu; C. Rayan Serrao; B. J. Kim; L. Huber; C. L. Chang

Measuring how the magnetic correlations evolve in doped Mott insulators has greatly improved our understanding of the pseudogap, non-Fermi liquids and high-temperature superconductivity. Recently, photo-excitation has been used to induce similarly exotic states transiently. However, the lack of available probes of magnetic correlations in the time domain hinders our understanding of these photo-induced states and how they could be controlled. Here, we implement magnetic resonant inelastic X-ray scattering at a free-electron laser to directly determine the magnetic dynamics after photo-doping the Mott insulator Sr2IrO4. We find that the non-equilibrium state, 2 ps after the excitation, exhibits strongly suppressed long-range magnetic order, but hosts photo-carriers that induce strong, non-thermal magnetic correlations. These two-dimensional (2D) in-plane Néel correlations recover within a few picoseconds, whereas the three-dimensional (3D) long-range magnetic order restores on a fluence-dependent timescale of a few hundred picoseconds. The marked difference in these two timescales implies that the dimensionality of magnetic correlations is vital for our understanding of ultrafast magnetic dynamics.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Ultrafast reversal of the ferroelectric polarization

Roman Mankowsky; A. von Hoegen; Michael Först; Andrea Cavalleri

We report on the demonstration of ultrafast optical reversal of the ferroelectric polarization in LiNbO_{3}. Rather than driving the ferroelectric mode directly, we couple to it indirectly by resonant excitation of an auxiliary high-frequency phonon mode with femtosecond midinfrared pulses. Because of strong anharmonic coupling between these modes, the atoms are directionally displaced along the ferroelectric mode and the polarization is transiently reversed, as revealed by time-resolved, phase-sensitive, second-harmonic generation. This reversal can be induced in both directions, a key prerequisite for practical applications.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2015

Mode-Selective Control of the Crystal Lattice

Michael Först; Roman Mankowsky; Andrea Cavalleri

CONSPECTUS: Driving phase changes by selective optical excitation of specific vibrational modes in molecular and condensed phase systems has long been a grand goal for laser science. However, phase control has to date primarily been achieved by using coherent light fields generated by femtosecond pulsed lasers at near-infrared or visible wavelengths. This field is now being advanced by progress in generating intense femtosecond pulses in the mid-infrared, which can be tuned into resonance with infrared-active crystal lattice modes of a solid. Selective vibrational excitation is particularly interesting in complex oxides with strong electronic correlations, where even subtle modulations of the crystallographic structure can lead to colossal changes of the electronic and magnetic properties. In this Account, we summarize recent efforts to control the collective phase state in solids through mode-selective lattice excitation. The key aspect of the underlying physics is the nonlinear coupling of the resonantly driven phonon to other (Raman-active) modes due to lattice anharmonicities, theoretically discussed as ionic Raman scattering in the 1970s. Such nonlinear phononic excitation leads to rectification of a directly excited infrared-active mode and to a net displacement of the crystal along the coordinate of all anharmonically coupled modes. We present the theoretical basis and the experimental demonstration of this phenomenon, using femtosecond optical spectroscopy and ultrafast X-ray diffraction at a free electron laser. The observed nonlinear lattice dynamics is shown to drive electronic and magnetic phase transitions in many complex oxides, including insulator-metal transitions, charge/orbital order melting and magnetic switching in manganites. Furthermore, we show that the selective vibrational excitation can drive high-TC cuprates into a transient structure with enhanced superconductivity. The combination of nonlinear phononics with ultrafast crystallography at X-ray free electron lasers may provide new design rules for the development of materials that exhibit these exotic behaviors also at equilibrium.


Reports on Progress in Physics | 2016

Non-equilibrium control of complex solids by nonlinear phononics

Roman Mankowsky; Michael Först; Andrea Cavalleri

We review some recent advances in the use of optical fields at terahertz frequencies to drive the lattice of complex materials. We will focus on the control of low energy collective properties of solids, which emerge on average when a high frequency vibration is driven and a new crystal structure induced. We first discuss the fundamentals of these lattice rearrangements, based on how anharmonic mode coupling transforms an oscillatory motion into a quasi-static deformation of the crystal structure. We then discuss experiments, in which selectively changing a bond angle turns an insulator into a metal, accompanied by changes in charge, orbital and magnetic order. We then address the case of light induced non-equilibrium superconductivity, a mysterious phenomenon observed in some cuprates and molecular materials when certain lattice vibrations are driven. Finally, we show that the dynamics of electronic and magnetic phase transitions in complex-oxide heterostructures follow distinctly new physical pathways in case of the resonant excitation of a substrate vibrational mode.


Physical Review B | 2014

Femtosecond x rays link melting of charge-density wave correlations and light-enhanced coherent transport in YBa2Cu3O6.6

Michael Först; A. Frano; S. Kaiser; Roman Mankowsky; C. R. Hunt; J. J. Turner; Georgi L. Dakovski; Michael P. Minitti; T. Loew; M. Le Tacon; B. Keimer; J. P. Hill; Andrea Cavalleri; S. S. Dhesi

In this study, we use femtosecond resonant soft x-ray diffraction to measure the optically stimulated ultrafast changes of charge density wave correlations in underdoped YBa₂Cu₃O₆.₆. We find that when coherent interlayer transport is enhanced by optical excitation of the apical oxygen distortions, at least 50% of the in-plane charge density wave order is melted. These results indicate that charge ordering and superconductivity may be competing up to the charge ordering transition temperature, with the latter becoming a hidden phase that is accessible only by nonlinear phonon excitation.


Physical Review B | 2015

Coherent modulation of the YBa2Cu3O6+x atomic structure by displacive stimulated ionic Raman scattering

Roman Mankowsky; Michael Först; T. Loew; J. Porras; B. Keimer; Andrea Cavalleri

Midinfrared light pulses can be used to resonantly excite optically active lattice vibrations in solids to amplitudes as high as several percent of interatomic distances. This technique has been shown to induce changes in the collective magnetic and electronic properties of many materials [1–3]. Integral to this optical control mechanism is the anharmonic coupling between the directly driven, optically active mode and other lattice vibrations [4–6]. The coupling is typically dominated by cubic anharmonicities and involves a displacive force that acts onto the crystal lattice in two ways. First, a phononic analog to rectification in nonlinear optics causes a quasistatic displacement along the normal mode coordinates of all coupled Raman modes. Secondly, whenever the displacive force rises promptly compared to the period of any of the anharmonically coupled modes, coherent oscillatory motions of these modes are excited. This second effect is the stimulated equivalent of ionic Raman scattering. Here, we study the coherent optical response of YBa2Cu3O6+x. Infrared-active apical oxygen motions are driven resonantly with midinfrared pulses at 20 THz, under the conditions for which superconducting transport is transiently enhanced [7–9]. We find that for excitation with pulses of 140 fs duration, for which only modes with frequency < 6T Hz can be driven coherently, oscillations of four Raman modes are stimulated, involving displacements of the copper atoms along the crystallographic c axis. This motion induces periodic changes in the in-plane O-Cu bond buckling and leads to an oscillatory transfer of charges between the CuO2 planes and the Cu-O chains [9], effectively modifying the doping of the planes; an effect that may be part of the puzzle of optically enhanced superconductivity in this compound [7–9]. We next discuss the process of stimulated ionic Raman scattering in more detail. The indirect excitation of coherent Raman modes by resonant excitation of large amplitude infrared-active (IR) vibrations in a solid is described to lowest order by the lattice Hamiltonian


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Nonlinear Electron-Phonon Coupling in Doped Manganites

Vincent Esposito; Michael Fechner; Roman Mankowsky; Henrik T. Lemke; Matthieu Chollet; James M. Glownia; Masao Nakamura; Masashi Kawasaki; Y. Tokura; U. Staub; P. Beaud; Michael Först

We employ time-resolved resonant x-ray diffraction to study the melting of charge order and the associated insulator-to-metal transition in the doped manganite Pr_{0.5}Ca_{0.5}MnO_{3} after resonant excitation of a high-frequency infrared-active lattice mode. We find that the charge order reduces promptly and highly nonlinearly as function of excitation fluence. Density-functional theory calculations suggest that direct anharmonic coupling between the excited lattice mode and the electronic structure drives these dynamics, highlighting a new avenue of nonlinear phonon control.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Multiple Supersonic Phase Fronts Launched at a Complex-Oxide Heterointerface

Michael Först; Kenneth R. Beyerlein; Roman Mankowsky; Wanzheng Hu; Giordano Mattoni; S. Catalano; Marta Gibert; Oleksandr Yefanov; Jesse N. Clark; A. Frano; James M. Glownia; Matthieu Chollet; Henrik T. Lemke; B. Moser; S.P. Collins; S. S. Dhesi; A. D. Caviglia; Jean-Marc Triscone; Andrea Cavalleri

Selective optical excitation of a substrate lattice can drive phase changes across heterointerfaces. This phenomenon is a nonequilibrium analogue of static strain control in heterostructures and may lead to new applications in optically controlled phase change devices. Here, we make use of time-resolved nonresonant and resonant x-ray diffraction to clarify the underlying physics and to separate different microscopic degrees of freedom in space and time. We measure the dynamics of the lattice and that of the charge disproportionation in NdNiO_{3}, when an insulator-metal transition is driven by coherent lattice distortions in the LaAlO_{3} substrate. We find that charge redistribution propagates at supersonic speeds from the interface into the NdNiO_{3} film, followed by a sonic lattice wave. When combined with measurements of magnetic disordering and of the metal-insulator transition, these results establish a hierarchy of events for ultrafast control at complex-oxide heterointerfaces.


Nature | 2018

Probing the interatomic potential of solids with strong-field nonlinear phononics

A. von Hoegen; Roman Mankowsky; Michael Fechner; Michael Först; Andrea Cavalleri

Nonlinear optical techniques at visible frequencies have long been applied to condensed matter spectroscopy. However, because many important excitations of solids are found at low energies, much can be gained from the extension of nonlinear optics to mid-infrared and terahertz frequencies. For example, the nonlinear excitation of lattice vibrations has enabled the dynamic control of material functions. So far it has only been possible to exploit second-order phonon nonlinearities at terahertz field strengths near one million volts per centimetre. Here we achieve an order-of-magnitude increase in field strength and explore higher-order phonon nonlinearities. We excite up to five harmonics of the A1 (transverse optical) phonon mode in the ferroelectric material lithium niobate. By using ultrashort mid-infrared laser pulses to drive the atoms far from their equilibrium positions, and measuring the large-amplitude atomic trajectories, we can sample the interatomic potential of lithium niobate, providing a benchmark for ab initio calculations for the material. Tomography of the energy surface by high-order nonlinear phononics could benefit many aspects of materials research, including the study of classical and quantum phase transitions.

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Henrik T. Lemke

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Michael P. Minitti

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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James M. Glownia

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Matthieu Chollet

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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