A Hubbard exciton fluid in a photo-doped antiferromagnetic Mott insulator
The undoped antiferromagnetic Mott insulator naturally has one charge carrier per lattice site. When it is doped with additional carriers, they are unstable to spin-fluctuation-mediated Cooper pairing as well as other unconventional types of charge, spin and orbital current ordering. Photo-excitatio...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature physics 2023-12, Vol.19 (12), p.1876-1882 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The undoped antiferromagnetic Mott insulator naturally has one charge carrier per lattice site. When it is doped with additional carriers, they are unstable to spin-fluctuation-mediated Cooper pairing as well as other unconventional types of charge, spin and orbital current ordering. Photo-excitation can produce charge carriers in the form of empty (holons) and doubly occupied (doublons) sites that may also exhibit charge instabilities. There is evidence that antiferromagnetic correlations enhance attractive interactions between holons and doublons, which can then form bound pairs known as Hubbard excitons, and that these might self-organize into an insulating Hubbard exciton fluid. However, this out-of-equilibrium phenomenon has not been experimentally detected. Here we report the transient formation of a Hubbard exciton fluid in the antiferromagnetic Mott insulator Sr
2
IrO
4
using ultrafast terahertz conductivity. Following photo-excitation, we observe rapid spectral-weight transfer from a Drude metallic response to an insulating response. The latter is characterized by a finite-energy peak originating from intraexcitonic transitions, whose assignment is corroborated by our numerical simulations of an extended Hubbard model. The lifetime of the peak is short (approximately one picosecond) and scales exponentially with the Mott gap size, implying extremely strong coupling to magnon modes.
Hole and particle-like quasiparticles of a Mott insulator can pair into excitonic bound states. Now, time-resolved measurements of Sr
2
IrO
4
show signs of an excitonic fluid forming from a photo-excited population of quasiparticles. |
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ISSN: | 1745-2473 1745-2481 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41567-023-02204-2 |