Stark Control of Electrons along Nanojunctions
ORAL
Abstract
Ultrafast control of currents on the nanoscale is essential for future innovations in nanoelectronics. Recently it was experimentally demonstrated that strong non-resonant few-cycle 4 fs laser pulses can be used to induce phase-controllable currents along gold–silica–gold nanojunctions in the absence of a bias voltage. However, since the effect depends on a highly non-equilibrium state of matter, its microscopic origin is unclear and the subject of recent controversy. Here we present atomistically detailed (time-dependent non-equilibrium Green’s function) electronic transport simulations that recover the main experimental observations and offer a simple intuitive picture of the effect. The photoinduced currents are seen to arise due to a difference in effective silica-metal coupling for negative and positive field amplitudes induced by lasers with low temporal symmetry. These insights can be employed to interpret related experiments, and advance our ability to control electrons in matter using lasers.
L. Chen, Y. Zhang, G. Chen and I. Franco, Nature Communications 9, 2070 (2018)
L. Chen, Y. Zhang, G. Chen and I. Franco, Nature Communications 9, 2070 (2018)
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Presenters
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Ignacio Franco
University of Rochester, Chemistry, University of Rochester
Authors
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Liping Chen
University of Rochester
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Zhang Yu
Los Alamos National Laboratory
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Guanhua Chen
University of Hong Kong
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Ignacio Franco
University of Rochester, Chemistry, University of Rochester