APS Logo

Self-energy dynamics and the mode-specific phonon threshold effect in Kekulé-ordered graphene

ORAL

Abstract

Electron-phonon interaction and related self-energy are fundamental to both the equilibrium properties and non-equilibrium relaxation dynamics of solids. Although electron-phonon interaction has been suggested by various time-resolved measurements to be important for the relaxation dynamics of graphene, the lack of energy- and momentum-resolved self-energy dynamics prohibits direct identification of the role of specific phonon modes in the relaxation dynamics. Here, by performing time- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy measurements on Kekulé-ordered graphene with folded Dirac cones at the Gamma point, we have succeeded in resolving the self-energy effect induced by the coupling of electrons to two phonons at Omega_1 = 177 meV and Omega_2 = 54 meV, and revealing its dynamical change in the time domain. Moreover, these strongly coupled phonons define energy thresholds, which separate the hierarchical relaxation dynamics from ultrafast, fast to slow, thereby providing direct experimental evidence for the dominant role of mode-specific phonons in the relaxation dynamics.

Publication: Hongyun Zhang†, Changhua Bao†, Michael Schüler, et al. Self-energy dynamics and mode-specific phonon threshold effect in a Kekulé-ordered graphene. Natl. Sci. Rev. 9, nwab175 (2022).

Presenters

  • Hongyun Zhang

    Tsinghua University

Authors

  • Hongyun Zhang

    Tsinghua University

  • Changhua Bao

    Tsinghua University, Department of Physics, Tsinghua University

  • Shaohua Zhou

    Tsinghua University

  • Michael Schüler

    Stanford University

  • Thomas Devereaux

    Stanford Univ, Stanford University

  • Shuyun Zhou

    Tsinghua University, Department of Physics, Tsinghua University