Separation of kinetic rate orders in extreme ultraviolet transient grating spectroscopy
We present an extreme ultraviolet (EUV) transient grating (TG) experiment of the spinel Co3O4 compound using tuneable incident energies across the Co M-2,M-3-edge and a 395 nm probe pulse, detecting both the first and the second diffraction orders (SDOs). While the first diffraction order shows a monotonous behavior as a function of time, with a sharp response at t = 0, followed by a weak sub-picosecond component and a nearly constant signal thereafter, the time dependence of SDO varies dramatically with the incident energy as it is tuned across the Co M-edge, with the appearance of a component at t > 1 ps that grows with increasing energy. The results are rationalized in terms of the deviations of the initial grating from sinusoidal to non-sinusoidal, namely a flattening of the grating pattern, that introduces new Fourier components. These deviations are due to higher order, three-body terms in the population relaxation kinetics. The present results highlight the use of the SDO response in EUV TG as a tool to identify higher order terms in the population kinetics.
WOS:001219527400001
2024-06-14
57
11
115401
REVIEWED
EPFL
Funder | Grant Number |
ERC Advanced Grants DYNAMOX | 695197 |
French-German-Swiss Solar Nitrogen Fixation | |
Ammonia from Sunlight and Air | 20SC-1_187032 |
Swiss NSF via the NCCR:MUST | |
ERC | 101078595 |
ERC PoC HYPER | 101123123 |
ERC Advanced Grant CHIRAX | 101095012 |