Tracking the ultrafast motion of a single molecule by femtosecond orbital imaging

Cocker, Tyler L. and Peller, Dominik and Yu, Ping and Repp, Jascha and Huber, Rupert (2016) Tracking the ultrafast motion of a single molecule by femtosecond orbital imaging. NATURE, 539 (7628). 263-+. ISSN 0028-0836, 1476-4687

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Abstract

Watching a single molecule move on its intrinsic timescale has been one of the central goals of modern nanoscience, and calls for measurements that combine ultrafast temporal resolution(1-8) with atomic spatial resolution(9-30). Steady-state experiments access the requisite spatial scales, as illustrated by direct imaging of individual molecular orbitals using scanning tunnelling microscopy(9-11) or the acquisition of tip-enhanced Raman and luminescence spectra with sub-molecular resolution(26-28). But tracking the intrinsic dynamics of a single molecule directly in the time domain faces the challenge that interactions with the molecule must be confined to a femtosecond time window. For individual nanoparticles, such ultrafast temporal confinement has been demonstrated(18) by combining scanning tunnelling microscopy with so-called lightwave electronics(1-8), which uses the oscillating carrier wave of tailored light pulses to directly manipulate electronic motion on timescales faster even than a single cycle of light. Here we build on ultrafast terahertz scanning tunnelling microscopy to access a state-selective tunnelling regime, where the peak of a terahertz electric-field waveform transiently opens an otherwise forbidden tunnelling channel through a single molecular state. It thereby removes a single electron from an individual pentacene molecule's highest occupied molecular orbital within a time window shorter than one oscillation cycle of the terahertz wave. We exploit this effect to record approximately 100-femtosecond snapshot images of the orbital structure with sub-angstrom spatial resolution, and to reveal, through pump/probe measurements, coherent molecular vibrations at terahertz frequencies directly in the time domain. We anticipate that the combination of lightwave electronics(1-8) and the atomic resolution of our approach will open the door to visualizing ultrafast photochemistry and the operation of molecular electronics on the single-orbital scale.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: SCANNING-TUNNELING-MICROSCOPY; ATTOSECOND CONTROL; REAL-SPACE; RESOLUTION; DYNAMICS; ELECTRONS; SPECTROSCOPY; MANIPULATION;
Subjects: 500 Science > 530 Physics
Divisions: Physics > Institute of Experimental and Applied Physics > Chair Professor Giessibl > Group Jascha Repp
Physics > Institute of Experimental and Applied Physics > Chair Professor Huber > Group Rupert Huber
Depositing User: Dr. Gernot Deinzer
Date Deposited: 12 Apr 2019 10:45
Last Modified: 12 Apr 2019 10:45
URI: https://pred.uni-regensburg.de/id/eprint/3956

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