13 research outputs found

    Coherent modulation of the electron temperature and electron-phonon couplings in a 2D material

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    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_2. After exciting the material with a short light pulse, spatial smearing of the electrons launches a coherent lattice breathing mode, which in turn modulates the electron temperature. This indicates a bi-directional energy exchange between the electrons and the strongly-coupled phonons. By tuning the laser excitation fluence, we can control the magnitude of the electron temperature modulation, from ~ 200 K in the case of weak excitation, to ~ 1000 K for strong laser excitation. This is accompanied by a switching of the dominant mechanism from anharmonic phonon-phonon coupling to coherent electron-phonon coupling, as manifested by a phase change of π\pi in the electron temperature modulation. Our approach thus opens up possibilities for coherently manipulating the interactions and properties of quasi-2D and other quantum materials using light.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure

    Evolution of the strange-metal scattering in momentum space of electron-doped La2xCexCuO4{\rm La}_{2-x}{\rm Ce}_x{\rm CuO}_4

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    The linear-in-temperature resistivity is one of the important mysteries in the strange metal state of high-temperature cuprate superconductors. To uncover this anomalous property, the energy-momentum-dependent imaginary part of the self-energy Im Σ(k,ω){\rm \Sigma}(k, \omega) holds the key information. Here we perform systematic doping, momentum, and temperature-dependent angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy measurements of electron-doped cuprate La2xCexCuO4{\rm La}_{2-x}{\rm Ce}_x{\rm CuO}_4 and extract the evolution of the strange metal scattering in momentum space. At low doping levels and low temperatures, Im Σω{\rm\Sigma} \propto \omega dependence dominates the whole momentum space. For high doping levels and high temperatures, Im Σω2{\rm\Sigma} \propto \omega^2 shows up, starting from the antinodal region. By comparing with the hole-doped cuprates La2xSrxCuO4{\rm La}_{2-x}{\rm Sr}_x{\rm CuO}_4 and Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8{\rm Bi}_2{\rm Sr}_2{\rm CaCu}_2{\rm O}_8, we find a dichotomy of the scattering rate exists along the nodal and antinodal direction, which is ubiquitous in the cuprate family. Our work provides new insight into the strange metal state in cuprates

    Testing Electron-phonon Coupling for the Superconductivity in Kagome Metal CsV3Sb5\rm{CsV_3Sb_5}

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    In crystalline materials, electron-phonon coupling (EPC) is a ubiquitous many-body interaction that drives conventional Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer superconductivity. Recently, in a new kagome metal CsV3Sb5\rm{CsV_3Sb_5}, superconductivity that possibly intertwines with time-reversal and spatial symmetry-breaking orders is observed. Density functional theory calculations predicted weak EPC strength,λ\lambda, supporting an unconventional pairing mechanism in CsV3Sb5\rm{CsV_3Sb_5}. However, experimental determination of λ\lambda is still missing, hindering a microscopic understanding of the intertwined ground state of CsV3Sb5\rm{CsV_3Sb_5}. Here, using 7-eV laser-based angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and Eliashberg function analysis, we determine an intermediate λ\lambda=0.45~0.6 at T=6 K for both Sb 5p and V 3d electronic bands, which can support a conventional superconducting transition temperature on the same magnitude of experimental value in CsV3Sb5\rm{CsV_3Sb_5}. Remarkably, the EPC on the V 3d-band enhances to λ\lambda~0.75 as the superconducting transition temperature elevated to 4.4 K in Cs(V0.93Nb0.07)3Sb5\rm{Cs(V_{0.93}Nb_{0.07})_3Sb_5}. Our results provide an important clue to understand the pairing mechanism in the Kagome superconductor CsV3Sb5\rm{CsV_3Sb_5}.Comment: To appear in Nature Communication

    Creation of a novel inverted charge density wave state

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    Charge density wave (CDW) order is an emergent quantum phase that is characterized by periodic lattice distortion and charge density modulation, often present near superconducting transitions. Here, we uncover a novel inverted CDW state by using a femtosecond laser to coherently reverse the star-of-David lattice distortion in 1T-TaSe2. We track the signature of this novel CDW state using time- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and the time-dependent density functional theory to validate that it is associated with a unique lattice and charge arrangement never before realized. The dynamic electronic structure further reveals its novel properties that are characterized by an increased density of states near the Fermi level, high metallicity, and altered electron–phonon couplings. Our results demonstrate how ultrafast lasers can be used to create unique states in materials by manipulating charge-lattice orders and couplings.INTRODUCTIO

    Testing electron–phonon coupling for the superconductivity in kagome metal CsV3Sb5

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    Electron-phonon coupling is thought to be too weak to be responsible for the superconducting Cooper pairing of the kagome metals AV3Sb5, but an experimental measurement is lacking. Here, the authors use ARPES measurements to find that electron-phonon coupling in CsV3Sb5 is strong enough to support the experimental superconducting transition
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