Annual Meeting of the APS Four Corners Section
Volume 60, Number 11
Friday–Saturday, October 16–17, 2015;
Tempe, Arizona
Session E4: Condensed Matter V
3:17 PM–4:29 PM,
Friday, October 16, 2015
Room: MU202
Chair: Weigang Wang, Arizona State University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2015.4CF.E4.3
Abstract: E4.00003 : Ultrafast Broadband Optical Spectroscopy of Complex Materials.
3:41 PM–4:17 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Dmitry Yarotski
(Los Alamos National Laboratory)
Remarkable properties of complex materials, such as multiferroics and
topological insulators, often emerge from strong interactions among charge,
lattice, spin and orbital degrees of freedom. Labyrinthine pattern of these
competing interactions has prevented development of predictive theoretical
frameworks and basic principles required to harness materials properties for
technological applications. In this regard, the femtosecond temporal
resolution, combined with spectral selectivity available with ultrafast
optical spectroscopy offers an unmatched ability to temporally discriminate
the dynamics of various degrees of freedom, and more importantly, the
dynamics of the coupling among them. Here, we discuss an application of
powerful ultrafast spectroscopic techniques to investigate the
non-equilibrium behavior of several classes of complex materials. In
actinide materials, hybridization between localized f-electrons and
itinerant d-electrons result in a wide spectrum of exotic states. We probed
the quasiparticle relaxation dynamics in URu$_{2}$Si$_{2}$ in a broad
temperature range, and demonstrated an appearance of pseudogap state as a
possible precursor to the enigmatic hidden-order phase. Topological
insulators represent a new state of matter where insulating bulk is
surrounded by a conducting surface. We applied terahertz spectroscopy at low
temperatures to separate the bulk from the surface transient responses in
Bi$_{2}$Se$_{3}$, and showed that short-lived bulk carriers co-exist with
the long-lived surface carriers which feature significantly higher mobility.
Finally, we revealed energy transfer pathways from electrons to magnons in
multiferroic HoMnO3 compound where ferroelectricity and magnetism co-exist
and are strongly coupled. Our measurements show that energy of
photoexcitation is initially transferred from electrons to phonons and
subsequently to magnons through spin-lattice relaxation.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2015.4CF.E4.3