Snapshots of non-equilibrium Dirac carrier distributions in graphene
Isabella Gierz, Jesse C. Petersen, Matteo Mitrano, Cephise Cacho,, Edmond Turcu, Emma Springate, Alexander St\"ohr, Axel K\"ohler, Ulrich, Starke, and Andrea Cavalleri

TL;DR
This study uses femtosecond EUV photoemission spectroscopy to directly observe non-equilibrium Dirac electron distributions in graphene, revealing conditions for population inversion and questioning carrier multiplication for light harvesting.
Contribution
It demonstrates a direct measurement technique for non-equilibrium carriers in graphene, providing insights into population inversion and carrier dynamics relevant for optoelectronic applications.
Findings
Interband excitation induces population inversion in graphene.
Mid-infrared excitation heats carriers without creating inversion.
No evidence of carrier multiplication was observed.
Abstract
The optical properties of graphene are made unique by the linear band structure and the vanishing density of states at the Dirac point. It has been proposed that even in the absence of a semiconducting bandgap, a relaxation bottleneck at the Dirac point may allow for population inversion and lasing at arbitrarily long wavelengths. Furthermore, efficient carrier multiplication by impact ionization has been discussed in the context of light harvesting applications. However, all these effects are difficult to test quantitatively by measuring the transient optical properties alone, as these only indirectly reflect the energy and momentum dependent carrier distributions. Here, we use time- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy with femtosecond extreme ultra-violet (EUV) pulses at 31.5 eV photon energy to directly probe the non-equilibrium response of Dirac electrons near the K-point…
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