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Ultrafast electronic line width broadening in the C 1s core level of graphene

Authors :
Curcio, Davide
Pakdel, Sahar
Volckaert, Klara
Miwa, Jill A.
Ulstrup, Søren
Lanatà, Nicola
Bianchi, Marco
Kutnyakhov, Dmytro
Pressacco, Federico
Brenner, Günter
Dziarzhytski, Siarhei
Redlin, Harald
Agustsson, Steinn
Medjanik, Katerina
Vasilyev, Dmitry
Elmers, Hans-Joachim
Schönhense, Gerd
Tusche, Christian
Chen, Ying-Jiun
Speck, Florian
Seyller, Thomas
Bühlmann, Kevin
Gort, Rafael
Diekmann, Florian
Rossnagel, Kai
Acremann, Yves
Demsar, Jure
Wurth, Wilfried
Lizzit, Daniel
Bignardi, Luca
Lacovig, Paolo
Lizzit, Silvano
Sanders, Charlotte E.
Hofmann, Philip
Source :
Phys. Rev. B 104, 161104 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Core level binding energies and absorption edges are at the heart of many experimental techniques concerned with element-specific structure, electronic structure, chemical reactivity, elementary excitations and magnetism. X-ray photoemission spectroscopy (XPS) in particular, can provide information about the electronic and vibrational many-body interactions in a solid as these are reflected in the detailed energy distribution of the photoelectrons. Ultrafast pump-probe techniques add a new dimension to such studies, introducing the ability to probe a transient state of the many-body system. Here we use a free electron laser to investigate the effect of a transiently excited electron gas on the core level spectrum of graphene, showing that it leads to a large broadening of the C 1s peak. Confirming a decade-old prediction, the broadening is found to be caused by an exchange of energy and momentum between the photoemitted core electron and the hot electron system, rather than by vibrational excitations. This interpretation is supported by a line shape analysis that accounts for the presence of the excited electrons. Fitting the spectra to this model directly yields the electronic temperature of the system, in agreement with electronic temperature values obtained from valence band data. Furthermore, making use of time- and momentum-resolved C 1s spectra, we illustrate how the momentum change of the outgoing core electrons leads to a small but detectable change in the time-resolved photoelectron diffraction pattern and to a nearly complete elimination of the core level binding energy variation associated with the narrow $\sigma$-band in the C 1s state. The results demonstrate that the XPS line shape can be used as an element-specific and local probe of the excited electron system and that X-ray photoelectron diffraction investigations remain feasible at very high electronic temperatures.<br />Comment: 16 pages, 12 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Phys. Rev. B 104, 161104 (2021)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2105.10472
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.104.L161104