Persistent photogenerated state attained by femtosecond laser irradiation of thin Td-MoTe2

Abstract

Laser excitation has emerged as a means to expose hidden states of matter and promote phase transitions on demand. Such laser induced transformations are often rendered possible owing to the delivery of spatially and/or temporally manipulated light, carrying energy quanta well above the thermal background. Here, we report time-resolved broadband femtosecond (fs) transient absorption measurements on thin flakes of Weyl semimetal candidate Td-MoTe2 subjected to various levels and schemes of fs-photoexcitation. Our results reveal that impulsive fs-laser irradiation alters the interlayer behavior of the low temperature Td phase as evidenced by the persistent disappearance of its characteristic coherent 1A1 = 13 cm-1 shear phonon mode. We found that this structural transformation withstands thermal annealing up to 500 K, although it can be reverted to the 1T\' phase by fs-laser treatment at room temperature. Our work opens the door to reversible optical control of topological properties.

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