Samuel Brem
Chalmers University of Technology
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Featured researches published by Samuel Brem.
Physical Review B | 2017
Samuel Brem; Florian Wendler; Ermin Malic
In the presence of strong magnetic fields the electronic band structure of graphene drastically changes. The Dirac cone collapses into discrete nonequidistant Landau levels, which can be externally tuned by changing the magnetic field. In contrast to conventional materials, specific Landau levels are selectively addressable using circularly polarized light. Exploiting these unique properties, we propose the design of a tunable laser operating in the technologically promising terahertz spectral range. To uncover the many-particle physics behind the emission of light, we perform a fully quantum mechanical investigation of the nonequilibrium dynamics of electrons, phonons, and photons in optically pumped Landau-quantized graphene embedded in a high-quality optical cavity. The microscopic insights gained allow us to predict optimal experimental conditions to realize a technologically promising terahertz laser.
Nano Letters | 2018
Philipp Steinleitner; Alexander Graf; Philipp Nagler; Kenji Watanabe; Takashi Taniguchi; Jonas Zipfel; Christian Schüller; Tobias Korn; Alexey Chernikov; Samuel Brem; Malte Selig; Gunnar Berghäuser; Ermin Malic; Rupert Huber
Heterostructures of van der Waals bonded layered materials offer unique means to tailor dielectric screening with atomic-layer precision, opening a fertile field of fundamental research. The optical analyses used so far have relied on interband spectroscopy. Here we demonstrate how a capping layer of hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) renormalizes the internal structure of excitons in a WSe2 monolayer using intraband transitions. Ultrabroadband terahertz probes sensitively map out the full complex-valued mid-infrared conductivity of the heterostructure after optical injection of 1s A excitons. This approach allows us to trace the energies and line widths of the atom-like 1s-2p transition of optically bright and dark excitons as well as the densities of these quasiparticles. The excitonic resonance red shifts and narrows in the WSe2/hBN heterostructure compared to the bare monolayer. Furthermore, the ultrafast temporal evolution of the mid-infrared response function evidences the formation of optically dark excitons from an initial bright population. Our results provide key insight into the effect of nonlocal screening on electron-hole correlations and open new possibilities of dielectric engineering of van der Waals heterostructures.
Annalen der Physik | 2017
Ermin Malic; Torben Winzer; Florian Wendler; Samuel Brem; Roland Jago; Andreas Knorr; Martin Mittendorff; Jacob C. König-Otto; Tobias Plötzing; Daniel Neumaier; Harald Schneider; Manfred Helm; Stephan Winnerl
Graphene is an ideal material to study fundamental Coulomb- and phonon-induced carrier scattering processes. Its remarkable gapless and linear band structure opens up new carrier relaxation channels. In particular, Auger scattering bridging the valence and the conduction band changes the number of charge carriers and gives rise to a significant carrier multiplication - an ultrafast many-particle phenomenon that is promising for the design of highly efficient photodetectors. Furthermore, the vanishing density of states at the Dirac point combined with ultrafast phonon-induced intraband scattering results in an accumulation of carriers and a population inversion suggesting the design of graphene-based terahertz lasers. Here, we review our work on the ultrafast carrier dynamics in graphene and Landau-quantized graphene is presented providing a microscopic view on the appearance of carrier multiplication and population inversion.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Samuel Brem; Malte Selig; Gunnar Berghaeuser; Ermin Malic
Monolayers of transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are characterized by an extraordinarily strong Coulomb interaction giving rise to tightly bound excitons with binding energies of hundreds of meV. Excitons dominate the optical response as well as the ultrafast dynamics in TMDs. As a result, a microscopic understanding of exciton dynamics is the key for a technological application of these materials. In spite of this immense importance, elementary processes guiding the formation and relaxation of excitons after optical excitation of an electron-hole plasma has remained unexplored to a large extent. Here, we provide a fully quantum mechanical description of momentum- and energy-resolved exciton dynamics in monolayer molybdenum diselenide (MoSe2) including optical excitation, formation of excitons, radiative recombination as well as phonon-induced cascade-like relaxation down to the excitonic ground state. Based on the gained insights, we reveal experimentally measurable features in pump-probe spectra providing evidence for the exciton relaxation cascade.
Physical Review Letters | 2017
Florian Wendler; Martin Mittendorff; Jacob C. König-Otto; Samuel Brem; Christian Berger; W. A. de Heer; Roman Böttger; Harald Schneider; Manfred Helm; Stephan Winnerl; Ermin Malic
Recent pump-probe experiments performed on graphene in a perpendicular magnetic field have revealed carrier relaxation times ranging from picoseconds to nanoseconds depending on the quality of the sample. To explain this surprising behavior, we propose a novel symmetry-breaking defect-assisted relaxation channel. This enables scattering of electrons with single out-of-plane phonons, which drastically accelerate the carrier scattering time in low-quality samples. The gained insights provide a strategy for tuning the carrier relaxation time in graphene and related materials by orders of magnitude.
arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2018
Zahra Khatibi; Maja Feierabend; Malte Selig; Samuel Brem; Christopher Linderälv; Paul Erhart; Ermin Malic
Monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are known to be highly sensitive to externally applied tensile or compressive strain. In particular, strain can be exploited as a tool to control the optical response of TMDs. However, the role of excitonic effects under strain has not been fully understood yet. Utilizing the strain-induced modification of electron and phonon dispersion obtained by first principle calculations, we present in this work microscopic insights into the strain-dependent optical response of various TMD materials. We show that the different changes in the excitonic linewidth of diverse TMD monolayers are due to the strain-induced modification of the relative spectral position of bright and dark excitonic states. Our theoretical results explain well the observed partially opposite changes in the excitonic linewidth of different TMDs at room temperature. Furthermore, we predict the linewidth behavior of excitonic resonances in strained TMDs for tensile and compressive strain at low temperatures.
Physical Review Materials | 2018
Maja Feierabend; Gunnar Berghäuser; Malte Selig; Samuel Brem; Timur Shegai; Siegfried Eigler; Ermin Malic
Monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) show an optimal surface-to-volume ratio and are thus promising candidates for novel molecule sensor devices. It was recently predicted that a certain class of molecules exhibiting a large dipole moment can be detected through the activation of optically inaccessible (dark) excitonic states in absorption spectra of tungsten-based TMDs. In this paper, we investigate the molecule signatures in photoluminescence spectra in dependence of a number of different experimentally accessible quantities, such as excitation density, temperature, as well as molecular characteristics including the dipole moment and its orientation, molecule-TMD distance, molecular coverage, and distribution. We show that under certain optimal conditions even room-temperature detection of molecules can be achieved.
Physical Review Materials | 2018
Ermin Malic; Malte Selig; Maja Feierabend; Samuel Brem; Dominik Christiansen; Florian Wendler; Andreas Knorr; Gunnar Berghäuser
arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2018
Simon Ovesen; Samuel Brem; Christopher Linderälv; Mikael Kuisma; Paul Erhart; Malte Selig; Ermin Malic
Physical Review Materials | 2018
Samuel Brem; Florian Wendler; Stephan Winnerl; Ermin Malic