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Impulsive Light-driven CDW wavevector modulation in 1T-TiSe<sub>2</sub>

POSTER

Abstract

1-T titanium diseleinde (1T-TiSe2) has been the subject of much study due to its prototypical second-order commensurate charge density wave (CDW) transition. The CDW phase competes with superconductivity, which is also typical of a large family of transition metal dichalcogenides. Below the CDW transition temperature, a soft TA phonon at the L point (q = [ ½ ½ ½]) condenses into long-range order. This phase transition was recently shown to have strong excitonic character with characteristics of an excitonic insulator, leaving open questions about the role of electron-phonon coupling in the CDW transition. To investigate this electron-phonon coupling, we performed optical pump, hard x-ray probe experiments on TiSe2 at LCLS to perturb the electronic states and observe the impulsive structural response of the material far from equilibrium. We observe coherent oscillations in the scattered x-ray intensity as a function of time near the CDW wavevector of 1T-TiSe2 upon optical excitation, which we interpret as a time-dependent modulation of the CDW wavevector based on the wavevector-dependent amplitude and phase of the coherences.

Presenters

  • Samuel W Teitelbaum

    Arizona State University, ASU

Authors

  • Samuel W Teitelbaum

    Arizona State University, ASU

  • Mariano Trigo

    SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab

  • David A Reis

    Stanford Univ, Stanford PULSE Institute

  • Gilberto De La Pena

    SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

  • Sefaattin Tongay

    Arizona State University, FIAP

  • Antia S Botana

    Argonne National Laboratory, Arizona State University

  • Robert A Kaindl

    Arizona State University

  • Michal G Szurek

    California Institute of Technology, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, University of Connecticut, Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solid, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Takahiro Sato

    SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab, SLAC

  • Larissa Boie

    ETH Zurich

  • Matthew Hurley

    mhurley8@asu.edu

  • Viktor Krapivin

    Stanford University, Stanford Univ

  • Alex H Miller

    Arizona State University

  • Priyadarshini Bhattacharyya

    Arizona State University

  • Steven L Johnson

    ETH Zurich

  • Vladimir Ovuka

    ETH Zurich

  • Yijing Huang

    Stanford University, Stanford Univ

  • Gal Orenstein

    Stanford, Stanford University