Ultrafast nonlinear electron dynamics in gapped graphene

POSTER

Abstract


We theoretically study the ultrafast electron dynamics in gapped graphene. Graphene consists of two equivalent sublattices and has both inversion and time-reversal symmetries. Breaking the inversion symmetry in graphene opens the bandgap and makes sublattices inequivalent. Gapped graphene is used as a model for a broad class of two-dimensional materials, including transition metal dichalcogenides. The ultrafast electron dynamics in gapped graphene is induced by a linearly polarized ultrafast optical pulse applied perpendicular to graphene monolayer. Our results show that the residual, i.e., after the pulse, conduction band (CB) population, which characterizes the irreversibility of the electron dynamics, is large and shows interference fringes in the reciprocal space. The finite bandgap in graphene makes the electron dynamics partially reversible, which manifests itself in smearing of the interference fringes in the CB population distribution.

*Office of Naval Research (DOD)N000-14-17-1-2588
National Science Foundation (NSF)sub-award No T883032,Federal Award No. EFMA-1741691
Department of Energy (DOE)DE-FG02-01ER15213
Department of Energy (DOE)DE-SC0007043
Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR)sub-award No. 24086151,Federal Award No. FA9550-15-1-0037

Presenters

  • Ahmal Zafar

    • Georgia State University

Authors

  • Ahmal Zafar

    • Georgia State University
  • Seyyedeh Azar Oliaei Motlagh

    • Georgia State University
  • ARANYO MITRA

    • Georgia State University
  • Fatemeh Nematollahi

    • Georgia State University
  • Vadym Apalkov

    • Department of Physics and Center of Nano Optics, Georgia State University
    • Georgia State University
  • Mark I Stockman

    • Department of Physics and Center of Nano Optics, Georgia State University
    • Georgia State University