Extreme ultraviolet high-harmonic interferometry of excitation-induced bandgap dynamics in solids

Publication date
DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/optica.559022
Reference L.M. Koll, S. Vendelbo Bylling Jensen, P.J. van Essen, B. de Keijzer, E. Olsson, J. Cottom, T. Witting, A. Husakou, M.J.J. Vrakking, L. Bojer Madsen, P.M. Kraus and P. Jürgens, Extreme ultraviolet high-harmonic interferometry of excitation-induced bandgap dynamics in solids, Optica 12, (10), 1606-1614 (2025)
Groups High-Harmonic Generation & EUV Science, Materials Theory and Modeling

Interferometry is a fundamental technique in physics, enabling precise measurements through the interference of waves. High-harmonic generation (HHG) in solids has emerged as a powerful method for probing ultrafast electronic dynamics within crystalline structures. In this study, we employed extreme ultraviolet (XUV) high-harmonic interferometry with phase-locked XUV pulse pairs to investigate excitation-induced bandgap dynamics in solids. Our experiments on amorphous SiO2 and crystalline MgO, complemented by analytical modeling and semiconductor Bloch equation simulations, reveal a correlation between phase variations in harmonic emission that are consistent with bandgap modifications. These findings suggest a potential pathway for time-resolved, all-optical probing of band structure dynamics, advancing prospects for petahertz-scale electronic applications and attosecond diagnostics of carrier dynamics.