Observation of a Picosecond Light-Induced Spin Transition in Polymeric Nanorods.
Marco E ReinhardKristjan KunnusKathryn LedbetterElisa BiasinDiana Bregenholt ZederkofRoberto Alonso MoriTim Brandt van DrielSilke NelsonMichael KozinaOlaf J BorkiewiczMaciej LorencMarco CammarataEric ColletDimosthenis SokarasAmy A CordonesKelly J GaffneyPublished in: ACS nano (2024)
Spin transition (ST) materials are attractive for developing photoswitchable devices, but their slow material transformations limit device applications. Size reduction could enable faster switching, but the photoinduced dynamics at the nanoscale remains poorly understood. Here, we report a femtosecond optical pump multimodal X-ray probe study of polymeric nanorods. Simultaneously tracking the ST order parameter with X-ray emission spectroscopy and structure with X-ray diffraction, we observe photodoping of the low-spin-lattice within ∼150 fs. Above a ∼16% photodoping threshold, the transition to the high-spin phase occurs following an incubation period assigned to vibrational energy redistribution within the nanorods activating the molecular spin switching. Above ∼60% photodoping, the incubation period disappears, and the transition completes within ∼50 ps, preceded by the elastic nanorod expansion in response to the photodoping. These results support the feasibility of ST material-based GHz optical switching applications.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- density functional theory
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- dual energy
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- high speed
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- quantum dots
- mass spectrometry
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- crystal structure