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Effects of Floquet Engineering on the Coherent Exciton Dynamics in Monolayer WS2

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posted on 2024-08-08, 11:00 authored by Mitchell A. Conway, Stuart K. Earl, Jack B. Muir, ThiHai-Yen Vu, Jonathan O. Tollerud, Kenji Watanabe, Takashi Taniguchi, Michael S. Fuhrer, Mark T. Edmonds, Jeffrey DavisJeffrey Davis

Coherent optical manipulation of electronic bandstructures via Floquet Engineering is a promising means to control quantum systems on an ultrafast time scale. However, the ultrafast switching on/off of the driving field comes with questions regarding the limits of the Floquet formalism (which is defined for an infinite periodic drive) through the switching process and to what extent the transient changes can be driven adiabatically. Experimentally addressing these questions has been difficult, in large part due to the absence of an established technique to measure coherent dynamics through the duration of the pulse. Here, using multidimensional coherent spectroscopy we explicitly excite, control, and probe a coherent superposition of excitons in the K and K′ valleys in monolayer WS2. With a circularly polarized, red-detuned pump pulse, the degeneracy of the K and K′ excitons can be lifted, and the phase of the coherence rotated. We directly measure phase rotations greater than π during the 100 fs driving pulse and show that this can be described by a combination of the AC-Stark shift of excitons in one valley and the Bloch-Siegert shift of excitons in the opposite valley. Despite showing a smooth evolution of the phase that directly follows the intensity envelope of the nonresonant pump pulse, the process is not perfectly adiabatic. By measuring the magnitude of the macroscopic coherence as it evolves before, during, and after the nonresonant pump pulse we show that there is additional decoherence caused by power broadening in the presence of the nonresonant pump. This nonadiabaticity arises as a result of interactions with the otherwise adiabatic Floquet states and may be a problem for many applications, such as manipulating qubits in quantum information processing; however, these measurements also suggest ways such effects can be minimized or eliminated.

Funding

ARC Centre of Excellence in Future Low Energy Electronics Technologies

Australian Research Council

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History

Available versions

Accepted manuscript

ISSN

1936-0851

Journal title

ACS Nano

Volume

17

Issue

15

Pagination

14545-14554

Publisher

American Chemical Society (ACS)

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2023 the authors. This is the final peer-reviewed accepted manuscript version, hosted under the terms and conditions of the Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0) license.

Language

eng

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