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Experimental signatures of the transition from acoustic plasmon to electronic sound in graphene.

David BarconsNiels C H HespHanan Herzig SheinfuxCarlos Ramos MarimónCurdin Martin MaissenAlessandro PrincipiReza AsgariTakashi TaniguchiKenji WatanabeMarco PoliniRainer HillenbrandIacopo TorreFrank H L Koppens
Published in: Science advances (2023)
Fermi liquids respond differently to perturbations depending on whether their frequency is higher (collisionless regime) or lower (hydrodynamic regime) than the interparticle collision rate. This results in a different phase velocity between the collisionless zero sound and the hydrodynamic first sound. We performed terahertz photocurrent nanoscopy measurements on graphene devices, with a metallic gate close to the graphene layer, to probe the dispersion of propagating acoustic plasmons, the counterpart of sound modes in electronic Fermi liquids. We report the observation of a change in the plasmon phase velocity when the excitation frequency approaches the electron-electron collision rate that is compatible with the transition between the zero and the first sound mode.
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