Researchers at ETH Zurich have investigated how fast electrons can ultimately be controlled with electric fields. The ETH team’s work is important for the petahertz electronic speed ranges of the future. Electronic components have become faster and faster over the years, thus making powerful computers and other technologies possible.

Speed is the basis for technologies that often seem like magic. Modern computers, for instance, are as powerful as they are because tiny switches inside them steer electric currents in fractions of a billionth of a second. The incredible data flows of the internet, on the other hand, are only possible because extremely fast electro-optic modulators can send information through fiber-optic cables in the shape of very short light pulses.

Today’s electronic circuits already routinely work at frequencies of several gigahertz (a billion oscillations per second) up to terahertz (a thousand billion oscillations). The next generation of electronics will therefore, sooner or later have to reach the realm of petahertz, which is a thousand times faster still. If and how electrons can be controlled that fast, however, is still largely unknown.

A short laser pulse travels through a diamond (black spheres) and excites electrons inside it. The strength of the excitation is measured using an attosecond ultraviolet pulse (violet). Image Credit: Matteo Lucchini / ETH Zurich. Click image for the largest view.

A short laser pulse travels through a diamond (black spheres) and excites electrons inside it. The strength of the excitation is measured using an attosecond ultraviolet pulse (violet). Image Credit: Matteo Lucchini / ETH Zurich. Click image for the largest view.

In a groundbreaking experiment, a team led by ETH professor Ursula Keller has now investigated how electrons react to petahertz field speeds.

In their experiment, Keller and her collaborators exposed a tiny piece of diamond with a thickness of only 50 nanometres to an infrared laser pulse lasting a few femtoseconds (i.e., a millionth of a billionth of a second). The electric field of that laser light, having a frequency of about half a petahertz, oscillated back and forth five times in that short time and thus excited the electrons.

Generally, the effect of electric fields on electrons in transparent materials can be measured indirectly by sending light through the material and then observing how strongly the material absorbs it. Such measurements are easy for constant electric fields, but the extremely rapidly oscillating fields of a laser beam poses a difficult challenge to the researchers. In principle, the light used for measuring the absorption should only be switched on for a fraction of the oscillation period of the electric field. That, in turn, means that a probe pulse may only last less than a femtosecond. Moreover, the oscillation phase of the electric field of the laser pulse has to be known exactly when the probe pulse is switched on.

Keller’s team had already performed the groundwork for the solution of these problems in the late 1990’s. “At the time we were the first to show how the oscillatory phase of a femtosecond laser pulse can be precisely stabilized,” Keller explained, “which, in turn, is a prerequisite for producing attosecond laser pulses.”

That technique has since been refined and today allows the researchers to realize light pulses in the extreme ultraviolet, with wavelengths around 30 nanometres, that only last a fraction of a femtosecond and are also synchronized with the oscillatory phase of an infrared pulse.

In their recent experiments the researchers at ETH used such a harnessed team of laser pulses to excite the electrons in the diamond with the electric field of the infrared pulse and, at the same time, to measure the resulting absorption changes with the ultraviolet attosecond pulse. They observed, indeed, that the absorption varied characteristically following the rhythm of the oscillating electric field of the infrared pulse.

In order to understand the details of what went on inside the diamond, however, some more detective work was necessary.

First, a team of researchers led by Katsuhiro Yabana at Tsukuba University in Japan in collaboration with the physicists at ETH simulated the reaction of the electrons in diamond to the infrared pulse using a supercomputer, finding the same behavior of the absorption that was measured in Zurich. Those simulations included the complex interplay between the electrons and the crystal lattice of diamond, which results in a large number of so-called energy bands which the electrons can occupy.

Matteo Lucchini, a postdoc in Keller’s group explained, “The advantage of the simulations compared to the experiment, however, is that several of the effects that occur in real diamond can be switched on or off, so that eventually we were able to ascribe the characteristic absorption behavior of diamond to just two such energy bands.”

It was that realization that, in the end, was crucial for the interpretation of the experimental data. The researchers were able to conclude that the dynamical Franz-Keldysh effect was responsible for the absorption in diamond under the influence of the infrared laser pulse.

The Franz-Keldysh effect for static electric fields has been known and well understood for several years, but its dynamical counterpart for extremely rapidly oscillating fields had not been observed until now.

Lukas Gallmann, a Senior Scientist in Keller’s lab explained, “The fact that we could still see that effect even at petahertz excitation frequencies confirmed that the electrons could, indeed, be influenced at the speed limit of the laser field,”

The dynamical interaction is also of fundamental interest as it appears in a regime that is neither dominated by quantum mechanical nor by classical light-matter interactions. This means that two kinds of physical effects simultaneously play a role: those in which light acts as energy quanta (photons), and those in which it is represented by a classical electromagnetic field.

The work, now published in Science has shown that the reaction of the material to the optical field is dominated by the motion of the electrons in a single energy band rather than by transitions between different bands. In similar experiments it had been unclear up to now what exactly was going on, but the experiment at ETH has now settled that question.

Energy for electronics is still in a huge growth phase. Things like Facebook, which stores huge amounts of data and the ‘cloud’ that is another huge widely dispersed store of data use a great deal of energy. Electronics use energy as current for a period of time, billed as kilowatts per hour, so smaller faster electronics is a sure way to save energy, or to have more Facebook pages and a bigger cloud.


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