Oral: Role of electron-phonon interaction in quasi-1D excitonic chalcogenide Ta2Ni(Se,S)5

ORAL

Abstract

The search for spontaneously formed excitons in solid state materials has lasted for more than half a century. Despite intense experimental effort, a concurrent structural transition caused by electron-phonon interaction often complicates the search. Lately, Ta2Ni(Se,S)5 system has received increasing attention as a potential quasi-1D excitonic insulator, with a normal state continuously tunable from a semimetal to a semiconductor. Combining angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and first principles calculation, we discover negative electronic compressibility in charge-doped ground state, and electron-phonon interaction may be solely accountable [1]. We also report an anomalous sudden disappearance of "pre-formed" excitons in the normal state across the semimetal-to-semiconductor transition, which contradicts Coulomb-interaction-only models [2]. By comparing the experimental phase diagram with existing model predictions, we highlight the importance of electron-phonon interaction in the general consideration of excitonic insulators especially at low dimensions.

* National Science Foundation DMR-2132343, DMR-2239171

Publication: [1] Chen, Chen et al., arXiv:2203.06817 (to appear on Physical Review Research)
[2] Chen, Tang et al., arXiv:2309.07111 (to appear on Nature Communications)

Presenters

  • Yu He

    Yale University

Authors

  • Yu He

    Yale University

  • Cheng Chen

    University of Oxford

  • Xiang Chen

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Weichen Tang

    University of California at Berkeley, University of California, Berkeley

  • zhibo kang

    Yale University

  • Steven G Louie

    University of California at Berkeley, University of California at Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California at Berkeley, and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, UC-Berkeley

  • Robert J Birgeneau

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Yulin Chen

    University of Oxford

  • Yao Wang

    Emory University, Department of Chemistry, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, 30322, USA, Clemson University