Physical Review Research (Oct 2019)

Ultrafast nonequilibrium dynamics of strongly coupled resonances in the intrinsic cavity of WS_{2} nanotubes

  • Bojana Višić,
  • Lena Yadgarov,
  • Eva A. A. Pogna,
  • Stefano Dal Conte,
  • Victor Vega-Mayoral,
  • Daniele Vella,
  • Reshef Tenne,
  • Giulio Cerullo,
  • Christoph Gadermaier

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevResearch.1.033046
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 3
p. 033046

Abstract

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Strong coupling of electric transition dipoles with optical or plasmonic resonators modifies their light-matter interaction and, therefore, their optical spectra. Semiconducting WS_{2} nanotubes intrinsically provide the dipoles through their excitonic resonances, and the optical cavity via their cylindrical shape. We investigate the nonequilibrium light-matter interaction in WS_{2} nanotubes in the time domain using femtosecond transient extinction spectroscopy. We develop a phenomenological coupled oscillator model with time-dependent parameters to describe the transient extinction spectra, allowing us to extract the underlying nonequilibrium electron dynamics. We find that the exciton and trion resonances shift due to many-body effects of the photogenerated charge carriers and their population dynamics on the femto- and picosecond timescale. Our results show that the time-dependent phenomenological model quantitatively reproduces the nonequilibrium optical response of strongly coupled systems.