Picosecond Competing Dynamics of Apparent Semiconducting-Metallic Phase Transition in the Topological Insulator Bi2Se3
- Authors
- Sim, Sangwan; Lee, Seungmin; Moon, Jisoo; In, Chihun; Lee, Jekwan; Noh, Minji; Kim, Jehyun; Jang, Woosun; Cha, Soonyoung; Seo, Seung Young; Oh, Seongshik; Kim, Dohun; Soon, Aloysius; Jo, Moon-Ho; Choi, Hyunyong
- Issue Date
- Mar-2020
- Publisher
- American Chemical Society
- Keywords
- topological insulator; ultrafast spectroscopy; terahertz spectroscopy; apparent phase transition
- Citation
- ACS Photonics, v.7, no.3, pp 759 - 764
- Pages
- 6
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- ACS Photonics
- Volume
- 7
- Number
- 3
- Start Page
- 759
- End Page
- 764
- URI
- https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/erica/handle/2021.sw.erica/1212
- DOI
- 10.1021/acsphotonics.9b01603
- ISSN
- 2330-4022
2330-4022
- Abstract
- Resolving the complex interplay between surface and bulk response is a long-standing issue in the topological insulators (TIs). Some studies have reported surface-dominated metallic responses, yet others show semiconducting-like bulk photoconductance. Using ultrafast terahertz spectroscopy with the advent of Fermi-level engineered TIs, we discovered that such difference arises from the time-dependent competing process of two parameters, namely, the Dirac-carrier surface scattering rate and the bulk Drude weight. After infrared femtosecond pulse excitation, we observed a metal-like photoconductance reduction for the prototypical n-type Bi2Se3 and a semiconductor-like increased photoconductance for the p-type Bi2Se3. Surprisingly, the bulkinsulating Bi2Se3, which is presumably similar to graphene, exhibits a semiconducting-to-metallic phase apparent transition at 10 ps. The sign-reversed, yet long-lasting (>= 500 ps) metallic photoconductance was observed only in the bulk-insulating Bi2Se3, indicating that such dynamic phase transition is governed by the time-dependent competing interplay between the surface scattering rate and the bulk Drude weight. Our observations illustrate new photophysical phenomena of the photoexcited-phase transition in TIs and demonstrate entirely distinct dynamics compared to graphene and conventional gapped semiconductors.
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