Coherent charge hopping suppresses photoexcited small polarons in ErFeO 3 by antiadiabatic formation mechanism.
Ye-Jin KimJocelyn L MendesJonathan M MichelsenHyun Jun ShinNara LeeYoung Jai ChoiScott Kevin CushingPublished in: Science advances (2024)
Polarons are prevalent in condensed matter systems with strong electron-phonon coupling. The adiabaticity of the polaron relates to its transport properties and spatial extent. To date, only adiabatic small polaron formation has been measured following photoexcitation. The lattice reorganization energy is large enough that the first electron-optical phonon scattering event creates a small polaron without requiring substantial carrier thermalization. We measure that frustrating the iron-centered octahedra in the rare-earth orthoferrite ErFeO 3 leads to antiadiabatic polaron formation. Coherent charge hopping between neighboring Fe 3+ ─Fe 2+ sites is measured with transient extreme ultraviolet spectroscopy and lasts several picoseconds before the polaron forms. The resulting small polaron formation time is an order of magnitude longer than previous measurements and indicates a shallow potential well, even in the excited state. The results emphasize the importance of considering dynamic electron-electron correlations, not just electron-phonon-induced lattice changes, for small polarons for transport, catalysis, and photoexcited applications.