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Extracting quantitative dielectric properties from pump-probe spectroscopy.

Authors :
Ashoka, Arjun
Tamming, Ronnie R.
Girija, Aswathy V.
Bretscher, Hope
Verma, Sachin Dev
Yang, Shang-Da
Lu, Chih-Hsuan
Hodgkiss, Justin M.
Ritchie, David
Chen, Chong
Smith, Charles G.
Schnedermann, Christoph
Price, Michael B.
Chen, Kai
Rao, Akshay
Source :
Nature Communications; 3/17/2022, Vol. 13 Issue 1, p1-8, 8p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Optical pump-probe spectroscopy is a powerful tool for the study of non-equilibrium electronic dynamics and finds wide applications across a range of fields, from physics and chemistry to material science and biology. However, a shortcoming of conventional pump-probe spectroscopy is that photoinduced changes in transmission, reflection and scattering can simultaneously contribute to the measured differential spectra, leading to ambiguities in assigning the origin of spectral signatures and ruling out quantitative interpretation of the spectra. Ideally, these methods would measure the underlying dielectric function (or the complex refractive index) which would then directly provide quantitative information on the transient excited state dynamics free of these ambiguities. Here we present and test a model independent route to transform differential transmission or reflection spectra, measured via conventional optical pump-probe spectroscopy, to changes in the quantitative transient dielectric function. We benchmark this method against changes in the real refractive index measured using time-resolved Frequency Domain Interferometry in prototypical inorganic and organic semiconductor films. Our methodology can be applied to existing and future pump-probe data sets, allowing for an unambiguous and quantitative characterisation of the transient photoexcited spectra of materials. This in turn will accelerate the adoption of pump-probe spectroscopy as a facile and robust materials characterisation and screening tool. Photoinduced changes in transmission, reflection and scattering prevent conventional pump-probe spectroscopy to unambiguously assign the origin of spectral signatures. Ashoka et al. have developed an optical modelling technique to extract quantitative and unambiguous changes in the dielectric function from standard pump-probe measurements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
13
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature Communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
155871739
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-29112-y