Physical Review X (Aug 2021)

Relation between Inner Structural Dynamics and Ion Dynamics of Laser-Heated Nanoparticles

  • Akinobu Niozu,
  • Yoshiaki Kumagai,
  • Hironobu Fukuzawa,
  • Naomichi Yokono,
  • Daehyun You,
  • Shu Saito,
  • Yu Luo,
  • Edwin Kukk,
  • Claudio Cirelli,
  • Jonas Rist,
  • Isabel Vela-Pérez,
  • Takashi Kameshima,
  • Yasumasa Joti,
  • Koji Motomura,
  • Tadashi Togashi,
  • Shigeki Owada,
  • Tetsuo Katayama,
  • Kensuke Tono,
  • Makina Yabashi,
  • Linda Young,
  • Kazuhiro Matsuda,
  • Christoph Bostedt,
  • Kiyoshi Ueda,
  • Kiyonobu Nagaya

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.11.031046
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 3
p. 031046

Abstract

Read online Read online

When a nanoparticle is irradiated by an intense laser pulse, it turns into a nanoplasma, a transition that is accompanied by many interesting nonequilibrium dynamics. So far, most experiments on nanoplasmas use ion measurements, reflecting the outside dynamics in the nanoparticle. Recently, the direct observation of the ultrafast structural dynamics on the inside of the nanoparticle also became possible with the advent of x-ray free electron lasers (XFELs). Here, we report on combined measurements of structural dynamics and speeds of ions ejected from nanoplasmas produced by intense near-infrared laser irradiations, with the control of the initial plasma conditions accomplished by widely varying the laser intensity (9×10^{14} W/cm^{2} to 3×10^{16} W/cm^{2}). The structural change of nanoplasmas is examined by time-resolved x-ray diffraction using an XFEL, while the kinetic energies of ejected ions are measured by an ion time-of-fight method under the same experimental conditions. We find that the timescale of crystalline disordering in nanoplasmas strongly depends on the laser intensity and scales with the inverse of the average speed of ions ejected from the nanoplasma. The observations support a recently suggested scenario for nanoplasma dynamics in the wide intensity range, in which crystalline disorder in nanoplasmas is caused by a rarefaction wave propagating at a speed comparable with the average ion speed from the surface toward the inner crystalline core. We demonstrate that the scenario is also applicable to nanoplasma dynamics in the hard x-ray regime. Our results connect the outside nanoplasma dynamics to the loss of structure inside the sample on the femtosecond timescale.