October 14, 2015
Journal Article

Capturing ultrafast photoinduced local structural distortions of BiFeO3

Abstract

The interaction of light with materials is an intensively studied research forefront, in which the coupling of radiation energy to selective degrees of freedom offers contact-free tuning of functionalities on ultrafast time scales. Capturing the fundamental processes and understanding the mechanism of photoinduced structural rearrangement are essential to applications such as photo-active actuators and efficient photovoltaic devices. Using ultrafast x-ray absorption spectroscopy aided by density functional theory calculations, we reveal the local structural arrangement around the transition metal atom in a unit cell of the photoferroelectric archetype BiFeO3 film. The out-of-plane elongation of the unit cell is accompanied by the in-plane shrinkage with minimal change of interaxial lattice angles upon photoexcitation. This uniaxial elastic deformation of the unit cell is driven by localized electric field as a result of photoinduced charge separation, in contrast to a global lattice constant increase and lattice angle variations as a result of heating. The finding of a photoinduced elastic unit cell deformation elucidates a microscopic picture of photocarrier-mediated nonequilibrium processes in polar materials.

Revised: May 22, 2020 | Published: October 14, 2015

Citation

Wen H., M. Sassi, Z. Luo, C. Adamo, D. Schlom, K.M. Rosso, and X. Zhang. 2015. Capturing ultrafast photoinduced local structural distortions of BiFeO3. Scientific Reports 5. PNNL-SA-110895. doi:10.1038/srep15098