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Exposing Hidden Electronic Configurations in Atomically Thin Superstructures with Extreme Light

Project description

Shining a light on quantum material mysteries

Light-induced phase transitions in solids offer a tantalising prospect for manipulating matter, promising ultra-fast memory devices and more. However, understanding these transitions remains a challenge. The ERC-funded EXCITE project will address this by exploring hidden phases in materials. Using cutting-edge techniques like nanoARPES at Aarhus University’s ASTRID2 light source, researchers will investigate transition metal dichalcogenides and moiré superstructures. By mapping electronic structures with nanoscale precision and femtosecond timing, EXCITE seeks to unravel the mysteries of hidden phases and push the boundaries of ultra-fast science. This project holds promise for revolutionising our understanding of quantum materials and unlocking new technological possibilities.

Objective

Light-induced phase transitions in solids present a tantalizing opportunity for controlling the constituents of matter. An intense optical excitation with a duration on the order of femtoseconds can trigger nonthermal electronic and structural configurations, switching the excited material into a hidden phase that may be exploited to realize new technologies such as ultrafast memory devices. A general picture of the microscopic processes underpinning hidden phases has not been established. Their existence has therefore only been exposed in a handful of systems, presenting a major obstacle for achieving on-demand quantum materials with light.

Drawing inspiration from these unique systems, I hypothesize that materials with a strongly correlated phase that is pinned by a two-dimensional superstructure provide a trajectory to a light-induced hidden phase. The objectives of EXCITE are (A) to establish the experimental parameter space to determine the electronic structure of hidden phases in bulk and single-layer correlated transition metal dichalcogenides, (B) to demonstrate the existence of hidden phases in optically excited moiré superstructures that simulate strongly correlated behavior and (C) to exploit the wide tunability of these systems in order to disentangle the general microscopic degrees of freedom that govern the trajectory into a hidden phase.

The objectives will be accomplished by establishing a state-of-the-art experiment to optically excite in situ prepared materials and probe their electronic structure during phase transitions with nanoscale spatial resolution and femtosecond time resolution. These ground-breaking capabilities will be realized by integrating a high-power laser system with my new synchrotron beamline for nanoscale photoemission spectroscopy (nanoARPES) at the ASTRID2 light source, Aarhus University. My experiments will enable me to critically assess basic assumptions in the field and move the boundaries of ultrafast science.

Host institution

AARHUS UNIVERSITET
Net EU contribution
€ 1 999 899,00
Address
NORDRE RINGGADE 1
8000 Aarhus C
Denmark

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Region
Danmark Midtjylland Østjylland
Activity type
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Links
Total cost
€ 1 999 899,00

Beneficiaries (1)