Time-resolved infrared spectroscopy of superconducting NbTiN films

ORAL

Abstract

Time-resolved, pump-probe measurements of superconducting thin NbTiN films were performed at the National Synchrotron Light Source, Brookhaven National Laboratory. Near-infrared Ti:sapphire laser pulses break Cooper pairs, producing an excess of non-thermal quasiparticles. The recombinations of these excess quasiparticles are probed by time-synchronized, far-infrared, synchrotron pulses, with a time resolution of order 200 picoseconds. The main process probed is the bottleneck between gap-edge quasiparticles and excess 2$\Delta $ phonons. (The phonons, generated by recombination of quasiparticles into Cooper pairs, are pairbreaking, producing gap-edge quasiparticles.) We will report the temperature, magnetic field, and laser fluence dependence of the spectrum-averaged far-infrared photoinduced transmission and reflection. We will also report the changes in the photoinduced far-infrared transmission spectrum.

*Supported by the DOE through grant DE-FG02-02ER45984 and contract DE-AC02-98CH10886 at BNL.

Authors

  • H. Zhang

  • D.H. Reitze

  • C.J. Stanton

    • University of Florida
  • D.B. Tanner

    • Department of Physics, University of Florida
    • Department of Physics, University of Florida, Gainesville FL 32611-8440, USA
  • R.P.S.M. Lobo

    • ESPCI-CNRS
  • G.L. Carr

    • Brookhaven National Laboratory