Ultrafast charge carrier and exciton dynamics in an excitonic insulator probed by time-resolved photoemission spectroscopy
Selene Mor, Marc Herzog, Claude Monney, and Julia St\"ahler

TL;DR
This study uses time-resolved photoemission spectroscopy to investigate ultrafast charge and exciton dynamics in the excitonic insulator candidate Ta2NiSe5, revealing rapid electron relaxation and persistent non-equilibrium states.
Contribution
It provides the first spectroscopic disentanglement of exciton condensate dynamics from valence band electron signatures in an excitonic insulator candidate.
Findings
Conduction electrons relax within less than 1 ps.
Relaxation time inversely proportional to excess energy.
Persistent carrier imbalance observed after 10 ps.
Abstract
An excitonic insulator phase is expected to arise from the spontaneous formation of electron-hole pairs (excitons) in semiconductors where the exciton binding energy exceeds the size of the electronic band gap. At low temperature, these ground state excitons stabilize a new phase by condensing at lower energy than the electrons at the valence band top, thereby widening the electronic band gap. The envisioned opportunity to explore many-boson phenomena in an excitonic insulator system is triggering a very active debate on how ground state excitons can be experimentally evidenced. Here, we employ a nonequilibrium approach to spectrally disentangle the photoinduced dynamics of an exciton condensate from the entwined signature of the valence band electrons. By means of time-and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy of the occupied and unoccupied electronic states, we follow the…
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