Materials Science

Scientists film soundwaves in a crystal

A unique X-ray technique allowed scientists to film soundwaves’ propagation in a diamond crystal. A world first, their results pave the way for ultra-fast imaging of solid materials such as metals, ceramics, rock, and bone.

Microscopy image of sound waves moving through a diamond crystal. Photo: DTU Pysics.
The team recorded movies of different types of sound waves traveling and reflecting off the surface of the crystal. Video: DTU Physics.
They also captured dispersion (the wave spreading out over time) and attenuation (weakening of the wave) over microsecond timescales. Video: DTU Physics.
Finally, they demonstrated that just a single X-ray pulse less than a thousandth of a nanosecond long was sufficient for imaging, opening the door for visualizing stochastic and irreversible processes in real-time on a timescale less than microseconds. Video: DTU Fysik.

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The results are part of a Villum Experiment project titled “Phonon Photography”. The Villum Experiment funding scheme is aimed specifically at high-risk/high-reward experiments that explore unconventional and groundbreaking new ideas. It was led by Senior Researcher Kristoffer Haldrup (PI) and Prof. Henning Friis Poulsen. Postdoc Theodor S. Holstad was hired on the project.

The research team from DTU Physics has already collaborated on another beamtime at the European XFEL led by Ass. Prof. Leora Dresselhaus-Marais, where the same method was used to capture interactions between acoustic waves and structural defects.

Furthermore, Postdoc Theodor S. Holstad was recently awarded another Villum Experiment grant for the project “Capturing lightning in solid-state materials”, where he aims to leverage ultrafast X-ray microscopy to capture electric breakdown in solids.