Ultrafast x-ray diffraction studies of photoexcited coherent phonons in SrRuO3 thin films
Abstract
We present ultrafast x-ray diffraction experiments on thin films of metallic SrRuO3 (SRO) after their excitation with ultrashort intense laser pulses. Depending on the layer thickness, the data exhibit a transient splitting of the (002) SRO Bragg peak evidencing the generation and propagation of sharp acoustic strain waves. These distinct structural dynamics are due to the exceptionally fast electron-phonon relaxation that gives rise to a quasi-instantaneous thermal stress in SRO. The interpretation is corroborated by numerical simulations which show excellent agreement with the experimental findings. Despite the qualitatively different lattice dynamics for different SRO layer thicknesses, we identify a universal evolution of the transient average layer strain. The inferred discrepancy of the thermal stress profile from the excitation profile may hint toward a temperature-dependent effective Gr\"uneisen parameter of SRO.
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