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Subcycle observation of lightwave-driven Dirac currents in a topological surface band.

Authors :
Reimann, J.
Schlauderer, S.
Schmid, C. P.
Langer, F.
Baierl, S.
Kokh, K. A.
Tereshchenko, O. E.
Kimura, A.
Lange, C.
Güdde, J.
Höfer, U.
Huber, R.
Source :
Nature; Oct2018, Vol. 562 Issue 7727, p396-400, 5p, 1 Diagram, 8 Graphs
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Harnessing the carrier wave of light as an alternating-current bias may enable electronics at optical clock rates1. Lightwave-driven currents have been assumed to be essential for high-harmonic generation in solids2-6, charge transport in nanostructures7,8, attosecond-streaking experiments9-16 and atomic-resolution ultrafast microscopy17,18. However, in conventional semiconductors and dielectrics, the finite effective mass and ultrafast scattering of electrons limit their ballistic excursion and velocity. The Dirac-like, quasi-relativistic band structure of topological insulators19-29 may allow these constraints to be lifted and may thus open a new era of lightwave electronics. To understand the associated, complex motion of electrons, comprehensive experimental access to carrier-wave-driven currents is crucial. Here we report angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy with subcycle time resolution that enables us to observe directly how the carrier wave of a terahertz light pulse accelerates Dirac fermions in the band structure of the topological surface state of Bi<subscript>2</subscript>Te<subscript>3</subscript>. While terahertz streaking of photoemitted electrons traces the electromagnetic field at the surface, the acceleration of Dirac states leads to a strong redistribution of electrons in momentum space. The inertia-free surface currents are protected by spin-momentum locking and reach peak densities as large as two amps per centimetre, with ballistic mean free paths of several hundreds of nanometres, opening up a realistic parameter space for all-coherent lightwave-driven electronic devices. Furthermore, our subcycle-resolution analysis of the band structure may greatly improve our understanding of electron dynamics and strong-field interaction in solids. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
562
Issue :
7727
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
132480815
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0544-x