Atomic real-space perspective of light-field-driven currents in graphene
Yuya Morimoto, Yasushi Shinohara, Kenichi L. Ishikawa, Peter, Hommelhoff

TL;DR
This paper provides an atomic-scale real-space analysis of light-field-driven currents in graphene, revealing how these currents originate from charge density changes and bond-specific charge flow, complementing reciprocal space models.
Contribution
It introduces a real-space perspective using a tight-binding model with overlap integrals, linking atomic-scale charge dynamics to macroscopic currents in graphene.
Findings
Currents flow mainly through {\
} bonds parallel to the field polarization.
Charge densities increase at bonds aligned with the electric field.
Abstract
When graphene is exposed to a strong few-cycle optical field, a directional electric current can be induced depending on the carrier-envelope phase of the field. This phenomenon has successfully been explained by the charge dynamics in reciprocal space, namely an asymmetry in the conduction band population left after the laser excitation. However, the corresponding real-space perspective has not been explored so far although it could yield knowledge about the atomic origin of the macroscopic currents. In this work, by adapting the nearest-neighbor tight-binding model including overlap integrals and the semiconductor Bloch equation, we reveal the spatial distributions of the light-field-driven currents on the atomic scale and show how they are related to the light-induced changes of charge densities. The atomic-scale currents flow dominantly through the network of the {\pi} bonds and are…
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