The competition between the electron-hole Coulomb attraction and the 3D dielectric screening dictates the optical properties of layered semiconductors. In low-dimensional materials, the equilibrium dielectric environment can be significantly altered by the ultrafast excitation of photo-carriers, leading to renormalized band gap and exciton binding energies. Recently, black phosphorus emerged as a 2D material with strongly layer-dependent elec- tronic properties. Here, we resolve the response of bulk black phosphorus to mid-infrared pulses tuned across the band gap. We find that, while above-gap excitation leads to a broadband light-induced transparency, sub-gap pulses drive an anomalous response, peaked at the single-layer exciton resonance. With the support of DFT calculations, we tentatively ascribe this experimental evidence to a non-adiabatic modification of the screening envir- onment. Our work heralds the non-adiabatic optical manipulation of the electronic properties of 2D materials, which is of great relevance for the engineering of versatile van der Waals materials.
Anomalous non-equilibrium response in black phosphorus to sub-gap mid-infrared excitation
Zanfrognini, Matteo;Varsano, Daniele;Rontani, Massimo;Molinari, Elisa;
2022
Abstract
The competition between the electron-hole Coulomb attraction and the 3D dielectric screening dictates the optical properties of layered semiconductors. In low-dimensional materials, the equilibrium dielectric environment can be significantly altered by the ultrafast excitation of photo-carriers, leading to renormalized band gap and exciton binding energies. Recently, black phosphorus emerged as a 2D material with strongly layer-dependent elec- tronic properties. Here, we resolve the response of bulk black phosphorus to mid-infrared pulses tuned across the band gap. We find that, while above-gap excitation leads to a broadband light-induced transparency, sub-gap pulses drive an anomalous response, peaked at the single-layer exciton resonance. With the support of DFT calculations, we tentatively ascribe this experimental evidence to a non-adiabatic modification of the screening envir- onment. Our work heralds the non-adiabatic optical manipulation of the electronic properties of 2D materials, which is of great relevance for the engineering of versatile van der Waals materials.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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