Femtosecond electron imaging of a transformation between different symmetry broken ground states of 2D charge density wave near a nonthermal critical point

ORAL

Abstract

We study the atomic scale dynamics of a CDW phase transition from a stripe phase into a new topological phase in rare-earth tritelluride compound. Such a new state is a hidden ground state not allowed thermodynamically, but is driven to form after an interaction quench by an intense infrared laser pulse. With femtosecond electron-based scattering, we capture the entire course of this transformation and show an emergent self-organization that defines a nonthermal critical point substantially different from a thermal critical point. The dynamical stabilization after the quench is achieved through the inherent underpinning symmetry that allows the development of the long-range coherence simultaneously for different broken symmetry states at far from equilibrium.

*We thank the funding support by NSF MRI facility grant: DMR1625181 and DOE grant: DE-FG02-06ER46309

Presenters

  • Faran Zhou

    • Michigan State Univ
    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Michigan state university

Authors

  • Faran Zhou

    • Michigan State Univ
    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Michigan state university
  • Joseph Williams

    • Michigan State Univ
    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Michigan state university
  • Christos Malliakas

    • Department of Chemistry, Northwestern University
    • Northwestern University
  • Mercouri Kanatzidis

    • Department of Chemistry, Northwestern University
    • Chemistry, Northwestern University
    • Chemistry, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60208
    • Northwestern University
    • Materials Science Division, Argonne National Laboratory
    • Argonne National Laboratory
  • Chong-yu Ruan

    • Michigan State Univ
    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Michigan state university