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Welcome to Project 3-01
We
investigate the geometric and electronic structure of various surfaces
and their response to the excitation by femtosecond laser pulses.
The research topics range from single electron dynamics at ferromagnetic
metal and semiconductor surfaces to the collective response of the
electronic system to intense laser excitation close to or above
the ablation threshold. Thereby the coupling of electronic excitations
to nuclear motion, including vibrations, phase transitions and eventually
material removal is studied. The latter bridges the gap between
fundamental science and technology.
Ongoing activities can be grouped into two main
topics
- Time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy
A first laser pulse excites the electronic system, while a second
pulse (laser or synchrotron) probes the transient response at
variable time delay. Due to the finite escape depth of the photoelectrons
the technique is sensitive to the first few surface layers.
Electron dynamics at semiconductor
surfaces
Jens Kopprasch, Kristof Zielke, and Christian Eickhoff
Ultrafast vs. equilibrium phase
transitions
Beatrice Andres, Marko Wietstruk, and Kristian Döbrich
supported by DFG
in collaboration with Markus
Donath and Anke Schmidt (Univ. Münster)
Time-of-flight spectroscopy
Jens Kopprasch, Thomas Kunze, and Martin Teichmann
in collaboration with SPECS
GmbH
Time-resolved
photoemission with Higher Harmonics
Robert Carley, Kristian Döbrich, Cornelius Gahl, and
Martin Teichmann
supported by DFG
in collaboration with the HHG
group at BESSY.
- Smart materials
such as molecular switches, nanoparticles, and femtosecond-laser
structured oxides
Carrier relaxation and switching
efficiency of
photochrome molecular ensembles at surfaces
Roland Schmidt, Daniel Brete, Wolfgang Freyer, Robert
Carley, Stefanie Wagner, and Cornelius Gahl
supported by DFG within
Sfb 658
Elementary Processes in Molecular Switches at Surfaces
Photochromic materials are
synthesized in our chemistry laboratory
Material Structuring with
Femtosecond Technology
Sandra Höhm, Alexandre Mermillod, and Arkadi Rosenfeld
supported by DFG, International Office of the DFG (WTZ program
with the Institute of Thermophysics, Novosibirsk, Russia)
For further information and job offers contact Martin
Weinelt or Arkadi Rosenfeld.
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