Event
Condensed and Living Matter Seminar: "Ultrafast manipulation of electronic interactions in quantum materials"
Matteo Mitrano (Harvard University)
Intense ultrashort electromagnetic fields are an increasingly important tool to realize and control novel emergent phases in quantum materials. Among a variety of nonthermal excitation pathways, a particularly intriguing route is represented by the direct light-engineering of effective many-body interactions, such as electron hopping amplitudes and electron-electron repulsion. Achieving a light-induced dynamical renormalization of the screened onsite Coulomb repulsion (“Hubbard U”) would have far-reaching implications for high-harmonic generation, attosecond spectroscopy and ultrafast magnetism in the solid state. However, experimental evidence for a dynamically controlled Hubbard U remains scarce. In this talk, I will present a recent demonstration of light-induced renormalization of the Hubbard U in a high-temperature superconductor, La2-xBaxCuO4, [1] and discuss its implications for the control of superconductivity, magnetism, as well as for the realization of other long-range-ordered phases in light-driven quantum materials. Further, I will discuss its role in the dynamical renormalization of magnetic fluctuations [2], which can be probed by newly developed ultrafast resonant inelastic x-ray scattering methods.
References
[1] D. R. Baykusheva et al. Phys. Rev. X 12, 011013 (2022).
[2] Y. Wang et al. Commun. Phys. 4, 212 (2021).