Hello!
Recently, I've come across your NTMpy open source package for solving coupled parabolic differential equations. As an experimentator, I'd have found using such a package very useful for analyzing my experimental data. Right now, I'm trying to simulate using NTMpy the excitation and relaxation dynamics of electron and lattice subsystems in an Au film heated by a single femtosecond laser pulse. To begin with, I started using your examples to become familiar with your package. In the experiment, we use Au films of different thickness. And while the Au thickness is below around 400-500 nm, the simulation results in adequate Te and Ti. However, increasing the thickness to 1000-3000 nm results in extremely low Te and Ti values at the same pump fluences. The bigger the thickness, the lower the temperatures (from several thousand of K to only several K in electron temperature). What would be the problem in this case? I've tried to increase the thickness of metal layers in your examples from several nm to hundreds nm, and in all cases the resulting temperatures were extremely low, very far from real.
Hello!
Recently, I've come across your NTMpy open source package for solving coupled parabolic differential equations. As an experimentator, I'd have found using such a package very useful for analyzing my experimental data. Right now, I'm trying to simulate using NTMpy the excitation and relaxation dynamics of electron and lattice subsystems in an Au film heated by a single femtosecond laser pulse. To begin with, I started using your examples to become familiar with your package. In the experiment, we use Au films of different thickness. And while the Au thickness is below around 400-500 nm, the simulation results in adequate Te and Ti. However, increasing the thickness to 1000-3000 nm results in extremely low Te and Ti values at the same pump fluences. The bigger the thickness, the lower the temperatures (from several thousand of K to only several K in electron temperature). What would be the problem in this case? I've tried to increase the thickness of metal layers in your examples from several nm to hundreds nm, and in all cases the resulting temperatures were extremely low, very far from real.