APS Logo

Polarized Transient Reflectance of Type II Weyl Semimetals WTe<sub>2</sub> and NbIrTe<sub>4</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

We characterize ultrafast optical anisotropy in type-II Weyl semimetals WTe2 and NbIrTe4, using polarized transient reflectance. We study single nanoflakes excited by an ultrafast (140 fs) 800 nm pulse, and monitor the dynamic reflectance of a tunable polarized NIR-MIR probe pulse. CW polarized reflectance measurements establish the biaxial symmetry of a flake's optical anisotropy. A half-wave plate sweeps the probe polarization between critical optical axes and records the dynamic response as a function of angle. The intensity and phase of the transient signal sensitively depends on the probe polarization in both materials, whereas characteristic lifetimes show no clear correlation. In WTe2, we observe a rapid ~1.0 ps decay followed by a slow nanosecond-scale relaxation. Likewise in NbIrTe4, we observe a fast ~0.6 ps initial decay followed by a slower nanosecond process. We interpret these results in the context of carrier thermalization and lattice cooling in topological semimetals.

Presenters

  • Samuel M Linser

    University Of Cincinnati

Authors

  • Samuel M Linser

    University Of Cincinnati

  • Giriraj Jnawali

    University Of Cincinnati

  • Seyyedesadaf Pournia

    University Of Cincinnati

  • Iraj Abbasian Shojaei

    University Of Cincinnati

  • Howard E Jackson

    University Of Cincinnati

  • Leigh Smith

    University Of Cincinnati

  • Congcong Le

    Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids

  • Fu-Chun Zhang

    Kavli Institute of Theoretical Sciences, University of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Kavli Institute of Theoretical Sciences, University of the Chinese Academy of Science

  • Brenden Ortiz

    University of California, Santa Barbara, Materials Department, UC Santa Barbara

  • Stephen D. Wilson

    Materials Department, UC Santa Barbara, Materials Department, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106-5050, USA, Materials, University of Santa Barbara, Materials Department, University of California, Santa Barbara