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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Light-Driven Extremely Nonlinear Bulk Photogalvanic Currents
Angel RubioAngel RubioUmberto De GiovanniniUmberto De GiovanniniUmberto De GiovanniniHannes HübenerNicolas Tancogne-dejeanOfer Neufeldsubject
PhotonBand gapGeneral Physics and AstronomyPhysics::Optics02 engineering and technologyphotocurrent7. Clean energy01 natural sciencesSettore FIS/03 - Fisica Della Materia0103 physical sciencesHigh harmonic generationhigh-harmonic generationSensitivity (control systems)010306 general physicsPhysicsPhotocurrentCondensed matter physicsbusiness.industrysemiconductor021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologySemimetalOrientation (vector space)SemiconductorStrong light-matter coupling0210 nano-technologybusinessdescription
We predict the generation of bulk photocurrents in materials driven by bichromatic fields that arc circularly polarized and corotating. The nonlinear photocurrents have a fully controllable directionality and amplitude without requiring carrier-envelope-phase stabilization or few-cycle pulses, and can be generated with photon energies much smaller than the band gap (reducing heating in the photoconversion process). We demonstrate with ab initio calculations that the photocurrent generation mechanism is universal and arises in gaped materials (Si, diamond, MgO, hBN), in semimetals (graphene), and in two- and three-dimensional systems. Photocurrents are shown to rely on sub-laser-cycle asymmetries in the nonlinear response that build-up coherently from cycle to cycle as the conduction band is populated. Importantly, the photocurrents are always transverse to the major axis of the co-circular lasers regardless of the material's structure and orientation (analogously to a Hall current), which we find originates from a generalized time-reversal symmetry in the driven system. At high laser powers (similar to 10(13) W/cm(2)) this symmetry can be spontaneously broken by vast electronic excitations, which is accompanied by an onset of carrier-envelope-phase sensitivity and ultrafast many-body effects. Our results are directly applicable for efficient light-driven control of electronics, and for enhancing sub-band-gap bulk photogalvanic effects We thank Dr. Shunsuke A. Sato for helpful discussions. We acknowledge financial support from the European Research Council (ERC-2015-AdG-694097), by the Cluster of Excellence "Advanced Imaging of Matter" (AIM), Grupos Consolidados (IT1249-19) and SFB925 "Light induced dynamics and control of correlated quantum systems." The Flatiron Institute is a division of the Simons Foundation. O. N. gratefully acknowledges the support of the Humboldt Foundation
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-09-13 | Physical Review Letters |