4.8 Article

Hot-Carrier Cooling in High-Quality Graphene Is Intrinsically Limited by Optical Phonons

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 15, Issue 7, Pages 11285-11295

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.0c10864

Keywords

graphene; cooling dynamics; hot electrons; transient absorption microscopy; optical phonons; phonon bottleneck

Funding

  1. Spanish MINECO [SEV2017-0706]
  2. European Commission [873028 HYDROTRONICS, ERC AdG 670949-LightNet]
  3. Leverhulme Trust [RPG-2019-363]
  4. European Union [804349, 881603]
  5. RyC fellowship [RYC-2017-22330]
  6. IAE project [PID2019-111673GB-I00]
  7. MAINZ Visiting Professorship
  8. Max Planck Graduate Center
  9. Johannes Gutenberg-Universitat Mainz (MPGC)
  10. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52072042, 51520105003]
  11. University of Liege under Special Funds for Research, IPD-STEMA Programme
  12. Belgian Fonds National de la Recherche Scientifique (FNRS) under PDR [T.0103.19ALPS]
  13. CECI [2.5020.11]
  14. Zenobe Tier-1 supercomputer (Gouvernement Wallon) [1117545]
  15. PRACE-3IP DECI grant 2DSpin and Pylight on Beskow [653838]
  16. Severo Ochoa program for Centers of Excellence in RD [CEX2019-000910-S]
  17. Fundacio Privada Cellex
  18. Fundacio Privada Mir-Puig
  19. Generalitat de Catalunya through the CERCA program
  20. Spanish Plan Nacional [PGC2018-096875-BI00]
  21. Catalan AGAUR [2017SGR1369]

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This study investigates the cooling dynamics of two technologically relevant high-quality graphene systems, revealing faster cooling rates due to an intrinsic mechanism where high-energy carriers emit optical phonons. This leads to efficient rethermalization and the development of a macroscopic model explaining the observed dynamics, eventually limited by optical-to-acoustic phonon coupling.
Many promising optoelectronic devices, such as broadband photodetectors, nonlinear frequency converters, and building blocks for data communication systems, exploit photoexcited charge carriers in graphene. For these systems, it is essential to understand the relaxation dynamics after photoexcitation. These dynamics contain a sub-100 fs thermalization phase, which occurs through carrier-carrier scattering and leads to a carrier distribution with an elevated temperature. This is followed by a picosecond cooling phase, where different phonon systems play a role: graphene acoustic and optical phonons, and substrate phonons. Here, we address the cooling pathway of two technologically relevant systems, both consisting of high-quality graphene with a mobility >10 000 cm(2) V-1 s(-1) and environments that do not efficiently take up electronic heat from graphene: WSe2-encapsulated graphene and suspended graphene. We study the cooling dynamics using ultrafast pump-probe spectroscopy at room temperature. Cooling via disorder-assisted acoustic phonon scattering and out-of-plane heat transfer to substrate phonons is relatively inefficient in these systems, suggesting a cooling time of tens of picoseconds. However, we observe much faster cooling, on a time scale of a few picoseconds. We attribute this to an intrinsic cooling mechanism, where carriers in the high-energy tail of the hot-carrier distribution emit optical phonons. This creates a permanent heat sink, as carriers efficiently rethermalize. We develop a macroscopic model that explains the observed dynamics, where cooling is eventually limited by optical-to-acoustic phonon coupling. These fundamental insights will guide the development of graphene-based optoelectronic devices.

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