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The ultrafast dynamics and conductivity of photoexcited graphene at different Fermi energies

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The ultrafast dynamics and conductivity of photoexcited graphene at different Fermi energies. / Tomadin, Andrea; Hornett, Sam M.; Wang, Hai I. et al.
In: Science Advances, Vol. 4, No. 5, 5313, 02.05.2018.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Tomadin, A, Hornett, SM, Wang, HI, Alexeev, EM, Candini, A, Coletti, C, Turchinovich, D, Kläui, M, Bonn, M, Koppens, FHL, Hendry, E, Polini, M & Tielrooij, K-J 2018, 'The ultrafast dynamics and conductivity of photoexcited graphene at different Fermi energies', Science Advances, vol. 4, no. 5, 5313. https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aar5313

APA

Tomadin, A., Hornett, S. M., Wang, H. I., Alexeev, E. M., Candini, A., Coletti, C., Turchinovich, D., Kläui, M., Bonn, M., Koppens, F. H. L., Hendry, E., Polini, M., & Tielrooij, K.-J. (2018). The ultrafast dynamics and conductivity of photoexcited graphene at different Fermi energies. Science Advances, 4(5), Article 5313. https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aar5313

Vancouver

Tomadin A, Hornett SM, Wang HI, Alexeev EM, Candini A, Coletti C et al. The ultrafast dynamics and conductivity of photoexcited graphene at different Fermi energies. Science Advances. 2018 May 2;4(5):5313. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.aar5313

Author

Tomadin, Andrea ; Hornett, Sam M. ; Wang, Hai I. et al. / The ultrafast dynamics and conductivity of photoexcited graphene at different Fermi energies. In: Science Advances. 2018 ; Vol. 4, No. 5.

Bibtex

@article{a9a20f5c7a6f46e6bd2ddef7e389f88b,
title = "The ultrafast dynamics and conductivity of photoexcited graphene at different Fermi energies",
abstract = "For many of the envisioned optoelectronic applications of graphene, it is crucial to understand the subpicosecond carrier dynamics immediately following photoexcitation and the effect of photoexcitation on the electrical conductivity—the photoconductivity. Whereas these topics have been studied using various ultrafast experiments and theoretical approaches, controversial and incomplete explanations concerning the sign of the photoconductivity, the occurrence and significance of the creation of additional electron-hole pairs, and, in particular, how the relevant processes depend on Fermi energy have been put forward. We present a unified and intuitive physical picture of the ultrafast carrier dynamics and the photoconductivity, combining optical pump–terahertz probe measurements on a gate-tunable graphene device, with numerical calculations using the Boltzmann equation. We distinguish two types of ultrafast photo-induced carrier heating processes: At low (equilibrium) Fermi energy (EF ≲ 0.1 eV for our experiments), broadening of the carrier distribution involves interband transitions (interband heating). At higher Fermi energy (EF ≳ 0.15 eV), broadening of the carrier distribution involves intraband transitions (intraband heating). Under certain conditions, additional electron-hole pairs can be created [carrier multiplication (CM)] for low EF, and hot carriers (hot-CM) for higher EF. The resultant photoconductivity is positive (negative) for low (high) EF, which in our physical picture, is explained using solely electronic effects: It follows from the effect of the heated carrier distributions on the screening of impurities, consistent with the DC conductivity being mostly due to impurity scattering. The importance of these insights is highlighted by a discussion of the implications for graphene photodetector applications.",
author = "Andrea Tomadin and Hornett, {Sam M.} and Wang, {Hai I.} and Alexeev, {Evgeny M.} and Andrea Candini and Camilla Coletti and Dmitry Turchinovich and Mathias Kl{\"a}ui and Mischa Bonn and Koppens, {Frank H. L.} and Euan Hendry and Marco Polini and Klaas-Jan Tielrooij",
year = "2018",
month = may,
day = "2",
doi = "10.1126/sciadv.aar5313",
language = "English",
volume = "4",
journal = "Science Advances",
issn = "2375-2548",
publisher = "American Association for the Advancement of Science",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The ultrafast dynamics and conductivity of photoexcited graphene at different Fermi energies

AU - Tomadin, Andrea

AU - Hornett, Sam M.

AU - Wang, Hai I.

AU - Alexeev, Evgeny M.

AU - Candini, Andrea

AU - Coletti, Camilla

AU - Turchinovich, Dmitry

AU - Kläui, Mathias

AU - Bonn, Mischa

AU - Koppens, Frank H. L.

AU - Hendry, Euan

AU - Polini, Marco

AU - Tielrooij, Klaas-Jan

PY - 2018/5/2

Y1 - 2018/5/2

N2 - For many of the envisioned optoelectronic applications of graphene, it is crucial to understand the subpicosecond carrier dynamics immediately following photoexcitation and the effect of photoexcitation on the electrical conductivity—the photoconductivity. Whereas these topics have been studied using various ultrafast experiments and theoretical approaches, controversial and incomplete explanations concerning the sign of the photoconductivity, the occurrence and significance of the creation of additional electron-hole pairs, and, in particular, how the relevant processes depend on Fermi energy have been put forward. We present a unified and intuitive physical picture of the ultrafast carrier dynamics and the photoconductivity, combining optical pump–terahertz probe measurements on a gate-tunable graphene device, with numerical calculations using the Boltzmann equation. We distinguish two types of ultrafast photo-induced carrier heating processes: At low (equilibrium) Fermi energy (EF ≲ 0.1 eV for our experiments), broadening of the carrier distribution involves interband transitions (interband heating). At higher Fermi energy (EF ≳ 0.15 eV), broadening of the carrier distribution involves intraband transitions (intraband heating). Under certain conditions, additional electron-hole pairs can be created [carrier multiplication (CM)] for low EF, and hot carriers (hot-CM) for higher EF. The resultant photoconductivity is positive (negative) for low (high) EF, which in our physical picture, is explained using solely electronic effects: It follows from the effect of the heated carrier distributions on the screening of impurities, consistent with the DC conductivity being mostly due to impurity scattering. The importance of these insights is highlighted by a discussion of the implications for graphene photodetector applications.

AB - For many of the envisioned optoelectronic applications of graphene, it is crucial to understand the subpicosecond carrier dynamics immediately following photoexcitation and the effect of photoexcitation on the electrical conductivity—the photoconductivity. Whereas these topics have been studied using various ultrafast experiments and theoretical approaches, controversial and incomplete explanations concerning the sign of the photoconductivity, the occurrence and significance of the creation of additional electron-hole pairs, and, in particular, how the relevant processes depend on Fermi energy have been put forward. We present a unified and intuitive physical picture of the ultrafast carrier dynamics and the photoconductivity, combining optical pump–terahertz probe measurements on a gate-tunable graphene device, with numerical calculations using the Boltzmann equation. We distinguish two types of ultrafast photo-induced carrier heating processes: At low (equilibrium) Fermi energy (EF ≲ 0.1 eV for our experiments), broadening of the carrier distribution involves interband transitions (interband heating). At higher Fermi energy (EF ≳ 0.15 eV), broadening of the carrier distribution involves intraband transitions (intraband heating). Under certain conditions, additional electron-hole pairs can be created [carrier multiplication (CM)] for low EF, and hot carriers (hot-CM) for higher EF. The resultant photoconductivity is positive (negative) for low (high) EF, which in our physical picture, is explained using solely electronic effects: It follows from the effect of the heated carrier distributions on the screening of impurities, consistent with the DC conductivity being mostly due to impurity scattering. The importance of these insights is highlighted by a discussion of the implications for graphene photodetector applications.

U2 - 10.1126/sciadv.aar5313

DO - 10.1126/sciadv.aar5313

M3 - Journal article

VL - 4

JO - Science Advances

JF - Science Advances

SN - 2375-2548

IS - 5

M1 - 5313

ER -