From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Photoinduced phase transition is a technique used in solid-state physics. It is a process to the nonequilibrium phases generated from an equilibrium by shining on high energy photons, and the nonequilibrium phase is a macroscopic excited domain that has new structural and electronic orders quite different from the starting ground state (equilibrium phase). [1] [2]

References

  1. ^ Nasu, K. (2004). Photoinduced Phase Transitions. World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd. ISBN  981-238-763-3
  2. ^ Nicholson CW, Lücke A, Schmidt WG, Puppin M, Rettig L, Ernstorfer R, Wolf M. Beyond the molecular movie: Dynamics of bands and bonds during a photoinduced phase transition. Science. 2018 Nov 16;362(6416):821-825. doi: 10.1126/science.aar4183 PMID  30442808


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Photoinduced phase transition is a technique used in solid-state physics. It is a process to the nonequilibrium phases generated from an equilibrium by shining on high energy photons, and the nonequilibrium phase is a macroscopic excited domain that has new structural and electronic orders quite different from the starting ground state (equilibrium phase). [1] [2]

References

  1. ^ Nasu, K. (2004). Photoinduced Phase Transitions. World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd. ISBN  981-238-763-3
  2. ^ Nicholson CW, Lücke A, Schmidt WG, Puppin M, Rettig L, Ernstorfer R, Wolf M. Beyond the molecular movie: Dynamics of bands and bonds during a photoinduced phase transition. Science. 2018 Nov 16;362(6416):821-825. doi: 10.1126/science.aar4183 PMID  30442808



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