Excitation and Relaxation of Nonthermal Electron Energy Distributions in Metals with Application to Gold
Abstract
A semiempirical theory for the excitation and subsequent relaxation of nonthermal electrons is described. The theory, which is applicable to ultrafast-laser excited metals, is based on the Boltzmann transport equation for the carrier distribution function f(ε,t) and includes electron-phonon, electron-electron, and electron-photon scattering integrals in forms that explicitly depend on the electronic density of states. Electron-phonon coupling is treated by extending the theory of Allen [Phys. Rev. Lett. 59, 1460 (1987)] to include highly-excited nonthermal electron distributions, and is used to determine the energy transfer rate between a nonthermal electron subsystem and a thermal phonon subsystem. Electron-electron scattering is treated with a simple energy-conserving electron-electron scattering integral. The electron-photon integral assumes photon absorption is phonon assisted. We apply the theory to analyze prior ultrafast thermionic emission, two-color photoemission, and electronic inelastic light (Raman) scattering experiments on Au. These analyses show that getting the details of f(ε,t) is necessary for proper interpretation of each experiment. Together, the photoemission and Raman-scattering analyses indicate an electron excited 1 eV above the Fermi level has an electron-electron scattering time in the range of 25 to 55 fs.
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