Ultrafast control of the electronic structure of TiSe2 with light
ORAL
Abstract
TiSe2 is a prototypical charge density wave (CDW) material, featuring a complex interplay of many-body interactions such as electron-electron, electron-lattice and electron-hole. Despite being studied for decades, it is still not clear what role these different degrees of freedoms play in stabilizing the CDW phase and how they are related to the pressure and doping induced superconductivity in this material. The ideal tool to study such a strongly correlated material is time and angular resolved photoelectron spectroscopy (trARPES), as it allows to not only map the response of the CDW order parameter to optical excitation, but also to directly visualize changes in many body interactions in the form of band renormalizations. In this work, we will show how the electronic structure of TiSe2 can be precisely controlled by optical excitation as a function of time and fluence. Our results are then interpreted with the aid of DFT calculations.
* This work was primarily funded by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Materials Sciences and Engineering Division under contract no. DE-AC02-05CH11231 (Ultrafast Materials Science program KC2203).
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Publication: Huber et al., JPCS 168 (2022)
Huber et al., Sci. Rep. 12 (2022)
Presenters
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Maximilian Huber
Berkeley National Lab, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Authors
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Maximilian Huber
Berkeley National Lab, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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Yi Lin
The University of Alabama & Berkeley Lab, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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Giovanni Marini
Fondazione Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia
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Matteo Calandra
University of Trento
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Alessandra Lanzara
University of California, Berkeley