How to Turn Light Into Atomic Vibrations

Converting laser light into nuclear vibrations is key to switching a material’s properties on and off for future electronics.

A laser pulse instantly redistributes electrons (from red to blue) in a bi-layer of molybdenum diselenide.

The Science

Sheet-like materials can have intriguing properties that could benefit devices from flexible electronics to solar cells. Researchers think they can customize the properties of these materials by using light pulses to rapidly switch the materials from one state to another. For example, light pulses could turn an electrical insulator into a conductor. But the ability to do this depends on how efficiently the light’s energy is transferred to the material’s atomic nuclei. Now, researchers have shown, for the first time, that the conversion of light to atomic vibrations in thin sheets of molybdenum diselenide is very fast and efficient. In fact, the conversion is nearly 100 percent efficient and occurs in a trillionth of a second.

The Impact

The study indicates a potential approach to control certain films with lasers. Scientists are interested in these films because the materials can be extremely strong and conductive. Controlling such films could aid next-generation applications. For example, it could benefit flexible electronics, data storage devices, solar cells, light-emitting diodes, and chemical catalysts.

Summary

Light could induce desirable structural changes in thin sheets of materials. These materials could have applications ranging from data storage devices to chemical catalysts. The challenge is truly understanding the real-time atomic motion and lattice temperature. Scientists have lacked the proper experimental techniques. Using ultrafast electron diffraction, researchers directly probed the conversion of light energy to vibrations of the overall atomic lattice in a model two-layered semiconductor, molybdenum diselenide. The team found that when creating a high charge carrier density, the energy is efficiently transferred to the lattice within a trillionth of a second. Computer simulations, specifically, first-principles nonadiabatic quantum molecular dynamics simulations, reproduced the conversion of light energy to lattice vibrations. The simulations further suggested that a softening of the vibrations in the light-induced excited state is a precursor to the efficient and rapid energy transfer. Knowing how the film’s atomic lattice responds to lasers has implications for, one day, using light to control the electrical currents in devices.

Contact

Uwe Bergmann
Stanford PULSE Institute, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
[email protected]

Funding

This work was supported as part of the Computational Materials Sciences Program funded by the Department of Energy (DOE), Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences (BES). The ultrafast electron diffraction work was performed at SLAC mega-electron-volt ultrafast electron diffraction facility, which is supported in part by the DOE Office of Science BES Scientific User Facilities Division Accelerator and Detector Research and Development program, the Linac Coherent Light Source, and SLAC. Simulations were performed at the Argonne Leadership Computing Facility under the DOE Innovative and Novel Computational Impact on Theory and Experiment (INCITE) program at the Center for High Performance Computing of the University of Southern California and the Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment, which is supported by National Science Foundation.

Publications

M.F. Lin, V. Kochat, A. Krishnamoorthy, L. Bassman, C. Weninger, Q. Zheng, X. Zhang, A. Apte, C.S. Tiwary, X. Shen, R. Li, R. Kalia, P. Ajayan, A. Nakano, P. Vashishta, F. Shimojo, X. Wang, D.M. Fritz, and U. Bergmann, “Ultrafast non-radiative dynamics of atomically thin MoSe2.” Nature Communications 8, 1745 (2017). [DOI: 10.1038/s41467-017-01844-2]

Related Links

SLAC news feature: SLAC-led Study Shows Potential for Efficiently Controlling 2-D Materials with Light

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