Strongly Coupled Coherent Phonons in Single-Layer MoS2.
Chiara TrovatelloHenrique P C MirandaAlejandro Molina-SánchezRocío Borrego-VarillasCristian ManzoniLuca MorettiLucia GanzerMargherita MaiuriJunjia WangDumitru DumcencoAlberto CiarrocchiLudger WirtzAndrea MariniGiancarlo SoaviAndrea C FerrariGiulio CerulloDavide SangalliStefano Dal ContePublished in: ACS nano (2020)
We present a transient absorption setup combining broadband detection over the visible-UV range with high temporal resolution (∼20 fs) which is ideally suited to trigger and detect vibrational coherences in different classes of materials. We generate and detect coherent phonons (CPs) in single-layer (1L)-MoS2, as a representative semiconducting 1L-transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD), where the confined dynamical interaction between excitons and phonons is unexplored. The coherent oscillatory motion of the out-of-plane A'1 phonons, triggered by the ultrashort laser pulses, dynamically modulates the excitonic resonances on a time scale of few tens of fs. We observe an enhancement by almost 2 orders of magnitude of the CP amplitude when detected in resonance with the C exciton peak, combined with a resonant enhancement of CP generation efficiency. Ab initio calculations of the change in the 1L-MoS2 band structure induced by the A'1 phonon displacement confirm a strong coupling with the C exciton. The resonant behavior of the CP amplitude follows the same spectral profile of the calculated Raman susceptibility tensor. These results explain the CP generation process in 1L-TMDs and demonstrate that CP excitation in 1L-MoS2 can be described as a Raman-like scattering process.
Keyphrases
- energy transfer
- quantum dots
- transition metal
- room temperature
- density functional theory
- sensitive detection
- high speed
- label free
- resting state
- molecular dynamics simulations
- high frequency
- optical coherence tomography
- highly efficient
- magnetic resonance
- computed tomography
- magnetic resonance imaging
- cross sectional
- raman spectroscopy
- visible light
- high resolution
- blood brain barrier