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Hot electron cooling in InSb probed by ultrafast time-resolved terahertz cyclotron resonance
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- Measuring terahertz (THz) conductivity on an ultrafast time scale is an excellent way to observe charge-carrier dynamics in semiconductors as a function of time after photoexcitation. However, a conductivity measurement alone cannot separate the effects of charge-carrier recombination from effective mass changes as charges cool and experience different regions of the electronic band structure. Here we present a form of time-resolved magneto-THz spectroscopy which allows us to measure cyclotron effective mass on a picosecond time scale. We demonstrate this technique by observing electron cooling in the technologically-significant narrow-bandgap semiconductor indium antimonide (InSb). A significant reduction of electron effective mass from 0.032$m_\mathrm{e}$ to 0.017$m_\mathrm{e}$ is observed in the first 200ps after injecting hot electrons. Measurement of electron effective mass in InSb as a function of photo-injected electron density agrees well with conduction band non-parabolicity predictions from ab initio calculations of the quasiparticle band structure.
- Subjects :
- Electron density
Condensed Matter - Materials Science
Materials science
Terahertz radiation
Indium antimonide
Cyclotron resonance
Materials Science (cond-mat.mtrl-sci)
FOS: Physical sciences
Electron
Photoexcitation
chemistry.chemical_compound
Condensed Matter::Materials Science
Effective mass (solid-state physics)
chemistry
Quasiparticle
Atomic physics
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....9d50af6b6b77213076b04d7b88494c1e