Transient excitonic states in optically-pumped Dirac materials: overview of recent work
A. Pertsova, A.V. Balatsky

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent theoretical and experimental advances in creating transient excitonic states in optically-pumped Dirac materials, highlighting their potential for observing non-equilibrium collective phenomena.
Contribution
It provides a unified theoretical framework for transient excitonic states in Dirac materials and discusses experimental signatures and material candidates for realization.
Findings
Transient excitonic gaps can be dynamically induced in pumped Dirac materials.
Optical pumping reduces the critical coupling needed for excitonic instability.
Experimental efforts are underway to observe transient excitonic condensates.
Abstract
Driven and non-equilibrium quantum states of matter have attracted growing interest in both theoretical and experimental studies in condensed matter physics. We review recent progress in realizing transient collective states in driven or pumped Dirac materials (DMs). In particular, we focus on optically-pumped DMs which have been theoretically proposed as a promising platform for observation of a transient excitonic instability. Optical pumping combined with the linear (Dirac) dispersion of the electronic spectrum offers a knob for tuning the effective interaction between the photoexcited electrons and holes, and thus provides a way of reducing the critical coupling for excitonic instability. As a result, a transient excitonic condensate could be achieved in a pumped DM while it is not feasible in equilibrium. We provide a unifying theoretical framework for describing transient…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTopological Materials and Phenomena · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
