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Ultrafast and persistent photoinduced phase transition at room temperature monitored by streaming powder diffraction.

Nature Communications 2024 January 25
Ultrafast photoinduced phase transitions at room temperature, driven by a single laser shot and persisting long after stimuli, represent emerging routes for ultrafast control over materials' properties. Time-resolved studies provide fundamental mechanistic insight into far-from-equilibrium electronic and structural dynamics. Here we study the photoinduced phase transformation of the Rb0.94 Mn0.94 Co0.06 [Fe(CN)6 ]0.98 material, designed to exhibit a 75 K wide thermal hysteresis around room temperature between MnIII FeII tetragonal and MnII FeIII cubic phases. We developed a specific powder sample streaming technique to monitor by ultrafast X-ray diffraction the structural and symmetry changes. We show that the photoinduced polarons expand the lattice, while the tetragonal-to-cubic photoinduced phase transition occurs within 100 ps above threshold fluence. These results are rationalized within the framework of the Landau theory of phase transition as an elastically-driven and cooperative process. We foresee broad applications of the streaming powder technique to study non-reversible and ultrafast dynamics.

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