Coherent phonon control beyond amplitude saturation in a sliding ferroelectric
Jan Gerrit Horstmann, Christoph Emeis, Andrin Caviezel, Quintin N. Meier, Nicolas Wyler, Thomas Lottermoser, Fabio Caruso, Manfred Fiebig

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that in a sliding ferroelectric, nonlinear phonon excitation limits can be bypassed by using two timed pulses, enabling larger lattice displacements and revealing anharmonic phonon coupling far from equilibrium.
Contribution
It introduces a novel pulse-timing approach to surpass nonlinear phonon saturation in a sliding ferroelectric, expanding control over lattice dynamics in quantum materials.
Findings
Single-pulse excitation saturates and diminishes phonon amplitude.
Two well-timed pulses achieve larger phonon amplitudes at fixed fluence.
Enhanced sliding motion reveals anharmonic phonon coupling far from equilibrium.
Abstract
The breakdown of Hooke's law marks the onset of nonlinear behaviour: when displacements become large, restoring forces weaken and conventional proportionality fails. In quantum materials, intense optical excitation can drive the crystal lattice into a similar regime, where established linear relations between light, electrons, and phonons no longer hold. Sliding ferroelectrics are particularly susceptible, as controlling their polarization requires large interlayer shifts. Displacive excitation of coherent phonons, the principal mechanism for launching structural motion, typically assumes that lattice-driving forces scale linearly with the photo-excited carrier density. Whether this linearity survives at high excitation, however, remains largely unexplored, and its breakdown can fundamentally limit accessible lattice displacements. Here we show that such nonlinear limitations can be…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMechanical and Optical Resonators · Photorefractive and Nonlinear Optics · Force Microscopy Techniques and Applications
