85 research outputs found
Giant Shear Displacement by Light-Induced Raman Force in Bilayer Graphene
Coherent excitation of shear phonons in van der Waals layered materials is a
non-destructive mechanism to fine-tune the electronic state of the system. We
develop a diagrammatic theory for the displacive Raman force and apply it to
the shear phonon's dynamics. We obtain a rectified Raman force density in
bilayer graphene of the order of leading to a
giant shear displacement pm for an intense infrared laser. We
discuss both circular and linear displacive Raman forces. We show that the
laser frequency and polarization can effectively tune in different
electronic doping, temperature, and scattering rates. We reveal that the finite
induces a Dirac crossing pair in the low-energy dispersion that
photoemission spectroscopy can probe. Our finding provides a systematic pathway
to simulate and analyze the coherent manipulation of staking order in the
heterostructures of layered materials by laser irradiation.Comment: 6 Pages, 3 Figures, Supplementary: As ancillary fil
Pseudo-Euler equations from nonlinear optics: plasmon-assisted photodetection beyond hydrodynamics
A great deal of theoretical and experimental efforts have been devoted in the
last decades to the study of long-wavelength photodetection mechanisms in
field-effect transistors hosting two-dimensional (2D) electron systems. A
particularly interesting subclass of these mechanisms is intrinsic and based on
the conversion of the incoming electromagnetic radiation into plasmons, which
resonantly enhance the photoresponse, and subsequent rectification via
hydrodynamic nonlinearities. In this Article we show that such conversion and
subsequent rectification occur well beyond the frequency regime in which
hydrodynamic theory applies. We consider the nonlinear optical response of
generic 2D electron systems and derive pseudo-Euler equations of motion for
suitable collective variables. These are solved in one- and two-dimensional
geometries for the case of graphene and the results are compared with those of
hydrodynamic theory. Significant qualitative differences are found, which are
amenable to experimental studies. Our theory expands the knowledge of the
fundamental physics behind long-wavelength photodetection.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure
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