Anomalously slow hot carrier cooling and insulator-to-metal transition in a photo-doped Mott insulator

Abstract Photo-doped Mott insulators can exhibit novel photocarrier transport and relaxation dynamics and non-equilibrium phases. However, time-resolved real-space imaging of these processes are still lacking. Here, we use scanning ultrafast electron microscopy (SUEM) to directly visualize the spati...

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Main Authors: Usama Choudhry, Jin Zhang, Kewen Huang, Emma Low, Yujie Quan, Basamat Shaheen, Ryan Gnabasik, Jiaqiang Yan, Angel Rubio, Kenneth S. Burch, Bolin Liao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2025-05-01
Series:Communications Physics
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s42005-025-02107-z
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Summary:Abstract Photo-doped Mott insulators can exhibit novel photocarrier transport and relaxation dynamics and non-equilibrium phases. However, time-resolved real-space imaging of these processes are still lacking. Here, we use scanning ultrafast electron microscopy (SUEM) to directly visualize the spatial-temporal evolution of photoexcited species in a spin-orbit assisted Mott insulator α-RuCl3. At low optical fluences, we observe extremely long hot photocarrier transport time over one nanosecond, almost an order of magnitude longer than any known values in conventional semiconductors. At higher optical fluences, we observe nonlinear features suggesting a photo-induced insulator-to-metal transition, which is unusual in a large-gap Mott insulator. Our results demonstrate the rich physics in a photo-doped Mott insulator that can be extracted from spatial-temporal imaging and showcase the capability of SUEM to sensitively probe photoexcitations in strongly correlated electron systems.
ISSN:2399-3650