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Main Authors: Horstmann, Jan Gerrit, Emeis, Christoph, Caviezel, Andrin, Meier, Quintin N., Wyler, Nicolas, Lottermoser, Thomas, Caruso, Fabio, Fiebig, Manfred
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.16422
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author Horstmann, Jan Gerrit
Emeis, Christoph
Caviezel, Andrin
Meier, Quintin N.
Wyler, Nicolas
Lottermoser, Thomas
Caruso, Fabio
Fiebig, Manfred
author_facet Horstmann, Jan Gerrit
Emeis, Christoph
Caviezel, Andrin
Meier, Quintin N.
Wyler, Nicolas
Lottermoser, Thomas
Caruso, Fabio
Fiebig, Manfred
contents The breakdown of Hooke's law marks the onset of nonlinear behaviour: when displacements become large, restoring forces weaken and conventional proportionality fails. In quantum materials, intense optical excitation can drive the crystal lattice into a similar regime, where established linear relations between light, electrons, and phonons no longer hold. Sliding ferroelectrics are particularly susceptible, as controlling their polarization requires large interlayer shifts. Displacive excitation of coherent phonons, the principal mechanism for launching structural motion, typically assumes that lattice-driving forces scale linearly with the photo-excited carrier density. Whether this linearity survives at high excitation, however, remains largely unexplored, and its breakdown can fundamentally limit accessible lattice displacements. Here we show that such nonlinear limitations can be surpassed in a sliding ferroelectric by timing, rather than strengthening the optical drive. Time-resolved second-harmonic generation reveals that the interlayer sliding phonon governing ferroelectricity saturates and even diminishes under single-pulse excitation. First-principles calculations attribute this nonlinearity to band-specific electron-phonon coupling that induces competing forces on the lattice. By splitting the optical energy into two well-timed pulses that avoid populating counteracting states, we achieve markedly larger phonon amplitudes at fixed total fluence. The resulting enhanced sliding motion exposes a regime of anharmonic phonon coupling that emerges only far from equilibrium. Our findings show that nonlinear limits in driven solids can be overcome, opening new pathways for steering lattice motion in quantum materials.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2508_16422
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Coherent phonon control beyond amplitude saturation in a sliding ferroelectric
Horstmann, Jan Gerrit
Emeis, Christoph
Caviezel, Andrin
Meier, Quintin N.
Wyler, Nicolas
Lottermoser, Thomas
Caruso, Fabio
Fiebig, Manfred
Optics
The breakdown of Hooke's law marks the onset of nonlinear behaviour: when displacements become large, restoring forces weaken and conventional proportionality fails. In quantum materials, intense optical excitation can drive the crystal lattice into a similar regime, where established linear relations between light, electrons, and phonons no longer hold. Sliding ferroelectrics are particularly susceptible, as controlling their polarization requires large interlayer shifts. Displacive excitation of coherent phonons, the principal mechanism for launching structural motion, typically assumes that lattice-driving forces scale linearly with the photo-excited carrier density. Whether this linearity survives at high excitation, however, remains largely unexplored, and its breakdown can fundamentally limit accessible lattice displacements. Here we show that such nonlinear limitations can be surpassed in a sliding ferroelectric by timing, rather than strengthening the optical drive. Time-resolved second-harmonic generation reveals that the interlayer sliding phonon governing ferroelectricity saturates and even diminishes under single-pulse excitation. First-principles calculations attribute this nonlinearity to band-specific electron-phonon coupling that induces competing forces on the lattice. By splitting the optical energy into two well-timed pulses that avoid populating counteracting states, we achieve markedly larger phonon amplitudes at fixed total fluence. The resulting enhanced sliding motion exposes a regime of anharmonic phonon coupling that emerges only far from equilibrium. Our findings show that nonlinear limits in driven solids can be overcome, opening new pathways for steering lattice motion in quantum materials.
title Coherent phonon control beyond amplitude saturation in a sliding ferroelectric
topic Optics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.16422