| Literature DB >> 27457385 |
Bin He1, Chunfeng Zhang1,2, Weida Zhu1, Yufeng Li1, Shenghua Liu1, Xiyu Zhu1, Xuewei Wu1, Xiaoyong Wang1, Hai-Hu Wen1, Min Xiao1,2,3.
Abstract
A rapidly-growing interest in WTe2 has been triggered by the giant magnetoresistance effect discovered in this unique system. While many efforts have been made towards uncovering the electron- and spin-relevant mechanisms, the role of lattice vibration remains poorly understood. Here, we study the coherent vibrational dynamics in WTe2 crystals by using ultrafast pump-probe spectroscopy. The oscillation signal in time domain in WTe2 has been ascribed as due to the coherent dynamics of the lowest energy A1 optical phonons with polarization- and wavelength-dependent measurements. With increasing temperature, the phonon energy decreases due to anharmonic decay of the optical phonons into acoustic phonons. Moreover, a significant drop (15%) of the phonon energy with increasing pump power is observed which is possibly caused by the lattice anharmonicity induced by electronic excitation and phonon-phonon interaction.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27457385 PMCID: PMC4960623 DOI: 10.1038/srep30487
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Coherent vibrational dynamics.
(a) The transient reflectivity signal as a function of time delay in WTe2 at T = 4 K. The probe beam at 780 nm is polarized perpendicularly to the pump beam. The pump fluence is 200 μJ/cm2. Inset shows the oscillatory component obtained by subtracting off the multi-exponential decay components (the dashed line). (b) Fourier transformation of the oscillation component shows the oscillation frequency at 0.27 THz (~9.0 cm−1).
Figure 2Polarization dependence.
Polar plots of the oscillation frequency (a) and amplitude (b) versus probe polarization angle with respect to the a-axis of WTe2 crystals. The pump fluence is 200 μJ/cm2.
Figure 3Temperature dependence.
(a) The oscillatory components probed at different temperatures. The curves are vertically shifted for clarity. (b) Temperature-dependent frequency of the oscillation mode. Inset shows the Fourier transformed spectra obtained from time-domain data in (a) at 10 and 250 K. The pump fluence is 200 μJ/cm2.
Figure 4Phonon softening.
(a) The peak frequency of the A1 mode as a function of the excitation fluence recorded at 4 K. Inset shows the Fourier transformed spectra obtained from time-domain data recorded under relatively low and strong fluence excitations, respectively. (b) The peak frequency of the A1 mode as a function of the excitation fluence recorded at room temperature. The oscillation components (a) and the Fourier transformed spectra recorded at room temperature with excitation density from 20 to 540 μJ/cm2 (from bottom to top), respectively. The curves are vertically shifted for clarity.