Materials exposed to extreme radiation environments such as fusion reactors or deep spaces accumulate substantial defect populations that alter their properties and subsequently the melting behavior. The quantitative characterization requires visualization with femtosecond temporal resolution on the atomic-scale length through measurements of the pair correlation function. Here, we demonstrate experimentally that electron diffraction at relativistic energies opens a new approach for studies of melting kinetics. Our measurements in radiation-damaged tungsten show that the tungsten target subjected to 10 displacements per atom of damage undergoes a melting transition below the melting temperature. Twoerature molecular dynamics simulations rev...
Ultrafast nonthermal melting of femtosecond laser-irradiated germanium was observed directly for the...
<p> The time needed for metals to respond structurally to electronic excitation is usually consider...
With full knowledge of a material’s atomistic structure, it is possible to predict any macroscopic p...
International audienceRadiation damage lowers the melting point of metal tungsten, an effect that ne...
Under the irradiation of an ultrafast intense laser, solid materials can be driven into nonequilibri...
One of the great dream experiments in Science is to directly observe atomic motions as theyoccur. Fe...
Understanding radiation induced ultrafast melting at material interfaces is essential in designing r...
International audienceUltrafast time-resolved optical spectroscopy has revealed new classes of physi...
Combining spatially resolved x-ray Laue diffraction with atomic-scale simulations, we observe how io...
Abstract. Ultrafast nonthermal melting of femtosecond laser-irradiated germanium was observed direct...
A coupled two-temperature, molecular dynamics methodology is used to simulate the structural evoluti...
Melting is a fundamental process of matter that is still not fully understood at the microscopic lev...
Using ultrafast, time-resolved, 1.54 angstrom x-ray diffraction, thermal and ultrafast nonthermal me...
Using in situ transmission electron microscopy, we have directly observed nano-scale defects formed ...
Understanding defect production and evolution under irradiation is a long-standing multi-scale probl...
Ultrafast nonthermal melting of femtosecond laser-irradiated germanium was observed directly for the...
<p> The time needed for metals to respond structurally to electronic excitation is usually consider...
With full knowledge of a material’s atomistic structure, it is possible to predict any macroscopic p...
International audienceRadiation damage lowers the melting point of metal tungsten, an effect that ne...
Under the irradiation of an ultrafast intense laser, solid materials can be driven into nonequilibri...
One of the great dream experiments in Science is to directly observe atomic motions as theyoccur. Fe...
Understanding radiation induced ultrafast melting at material interfaces is essential in designing r...
International audienceUltrafast time-resolved optical spectroscopy has revealed new classes of physi...
Combining spatially resolved x-ray Laue diffraction with atomic-scale simulations, we observe how io...
Abstract. Ultrafast nonthermal melting of femtosecond laser-irradiated germanium was observed direct...
A coupled two-temperature, molecular dynamics methodology is used to simulate the structural evoluti...
Melting is a fundamental process of matter that is still not fully understood at the microscopic lev...
Using ultrafast, time-resolved, 1.54 angstrom x-ray diffraction, thermal and ultrafast nonthermal me...
Using in situ transmission electron microscopy, we have directly observed nano-scale defects formed ...
Understanding defect production and evolution under irradiation is a long-standing multi-scale probl...
Ultrafast nonthermal melting of femtosecond laser-irradiated germanium was observed directly for the...
<p> The time needed for metals to respond structurally to electronic excitation is usually consider...
With full knowledge of a material’s atomistic structure, it is possible to predict any macroscopic p...