| Literature DB >> 26406846 |
Madhab Neupane1,2, Su-Yang Xu1, Yukiaki Ishida3, Shuang Jia4,5, Benjamin M Fregoso6, Chang Liu1, Ilya Belopolski1, Guang Bian1, Nasser Alidoust1, Tomasz Durakiewicz2, Victor Galitski7,8, Shik Shin3, Robert J Cava4, M Zahid Hasan1,9.
Abstract
The interaction between light and novel two-dimensional electronic states holds promise to realize new fundamental physics and optical devices. Here, we use pump-probe photoemission spectroscopy to study the optically excited Dirac surface states in the bulk-insulating topological insulator Bi_{2}Te_{2}Se and reveal optical properties that are in sharp contrast to those of bulk-metallic topological insulators. We observe a gigantic optical lifetime exceeding 4 μs (1 μs=10^{-6} s) for the surface states in Bi_{2}Te_{2}Se, whereas the lifetime in most topological insulators, such as Bi_{2}Se_{3}, has been limited to a few picoseconds (1 ps=10^{-12} s). Moreover, we discover a surface photovoltage, a shift of the chemical potential of the Dirac surface states, as large as 100 mV. Our results demonstrate a rare platform to study charge excitation and relaxation in energy and momentum space in a two-dimensional system.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26406846 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.115.116801
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Rev Lett ISSN: 0031-9007 Impact factor: 9.161