| Literature DB >> 32241890 |
Yingchao Zhang1, Xun Shi2, Wenjing You1, Zhensheng Tao1,3,4, Yigui Zhong1, Fairoja Cheenicode Kabeer5, Pablo Maldonado5, Peter M Oppeneer5, Michael Bauer6, Kai Rossnagel6,7, Henry Kapteyn1, Margaret Murnane2.
Abstract
Ultrashort light pulses can selectively excite charges, spins, and phonons in materials, providing a powerful approach for manipulating their properties. Here we use femtosecond laser pulses to coherently manipulate the electron and phonon distributions, and their couplings, in the charge-density wave (CDW) material 1T-TaSe2 After exciting the material with a femtosecond pulse, fast spatial smearing of the laser-excited electrons launches a coherent lattice breathing mode, which in turn modulates the electron temperature. This finding is in contrast to all previous observations in multiple materials to date, where the electron temperature decreases monotonically via electron-phonon scattering. By tuning the laser fluence, the magnitude of the electron temperature modulation changes from ∼200 K in the case of weak excitation, to ∼1,000 K for strong laser excitation. We also observe a phase change of π in the electron temperature modulation at a critical fluence of 0.7 mJ/cm2, which suggests a switching of the dominant coupling mechanism between the coherent phonon and electrons. Our approach opens up routes for coherently manipulating the interactions and properties of two-dimensional and other quantum materials using light.Keywords: ARPES; charge-density wave; electron–phonon interactions; ultrafast science
Year: 2020 PMID: 32241890 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1917341117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205