Physics & Astronomy Colloquium: Dr. Alfred Zong, UC Berkeley/LBNL

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Location: 127 Nieuwland Science Hall

Pathways toward unconventional light-induced states in quantum materials

Dr. Alfred Zong
Miller Postdoctoral Fellow
University of California, Berkeley
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Phase transitions instigated by  a tailored, ultrashort laser pulse usher in a new era for materials engineering in the femto- (10‑15) to pico-second (10‑12 s) regime, a time window that is commensurate with nanoscopic dynamics of electrons, spins, and lattice ions. Rapid advances in tabletop ultrafast techniques—such as time-resolved photoemission, diffraction, and core-level absorption—have enabled us to examine complex interactions and out-of-equilibrium states with unprecedented details. In this talk, I will discuss two important pathways for manipulating nonequilibrium phases of matter in quantum materials, which feature (i) competing orders, and (ii) strong Coulomb interaction between electrons and holes. More specifically, an ultrashort light pulse can (i) unleash a hidden order that is suppressed in equilibrium due to phase competition, and (ii) change the dimensionality of an ordered state by modifying excitonic correlations. I will explain the microscopic mechanisms behind these unconventional light-induced states, highlighting the roles of photoinduced topological defects, order parameter fluctuation, and Coulomb screening by excited mobile carriers. These points will be illustrated using examples from materials that exhibit a charge density wave—a spontaneous modulation of electron density accompanied by a periodic lattice distortion—which serves as a model platform to illustrate general principles underlying ultrafast light-matter interaction in strongly correlated systems.

Hosted by Prof. Forro