Phonon-induced disorder in dynamics of optically pumped metals from non-linear electron-phonon coupling
John Sous, Benedikt Kloss, Dante M. Kennes, David R. Reichman, Andrew, J. Millis

TL;DR
This paper investigates how non-linear electron-phonon interactions in optically pumped metals induce effective disorder, significantly affecting electronic correlations and potentially explaining the absence of transient superconductivity.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed simulation of non-linear electron-phonon coupling effects, revealing emergent disorder and enhanced dynamical responses in out-of-equilibrium metallic systems.
Findings
Effective disorder emerges without quenched randomness.
Enhanced local electronic correlations during dynamics.
Substantial dynamical response compared to linear models.
Abstract
The non-equilibrium dynamics of matter excited by light may produce electronic phases that do not exist in equilibrium, such as laser-induced high-transition-temperature superconductivity. Here we simulate the dynamics of a metal driven at initial time by a spatially uniform pump that excites dipole-active vibrational modes which couple quadratically to electrons. We study in detail the evolution of electronic and vibrational observables and their coherences. We provide evidence for enhancement of local electronic correlations, including double occupancy, accompanied by rapid loss of spatial structure, which we interpret as a signature of emergent effective disorder in the dynamics. This effective disorder, which arises in absence of quenched randomness, dominates the electronic dynamics as the system evolves towards a correlated electron-phonon long-time state, possibly…
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