Evidence for phonon hardening in laser-excited gold using x-ray diffraction at a hard x-ray free electron laser.
Adrien DescampsBenjamin K Ofori-OkaiOliviero BistoniZhijiang ChenEric CunninghamLuke B FletcherNicholas J HartleyJerome B HastingsDimitri KhaghaniMianzhen MoBob NaglerVanina RecoulesRonald RedmerMaximilian SchörnerDebbie G SeneskyPeihao SunHai-En TsaiThomas G WhiteSiegfried H GlenzerEmma E McBridePublished in: Science advances (2024)
Studies of laser-heated materials on femtosecond timescales have shown that the interatomic potential can be perturbed at sufficiently high laser intensities. For gold, it has been postulated to undergo a strong stiffening leading to an increase of the phonon energies, known as phonon hardening. Despite efforts to investigate this behavior, only measurements at low absorbed energy density have been performed, for which the interpretation of the experimental data remains ambiguous. By using in situ single-shot x-ray diffraction at a hard x-ray free-electron laser, the evolution of diffraction line intensities of laser-excited Au to a higher energy density provides evidence for phonon hardening.