Ultrafast dynamics and light-induced superconductivity from first principles
Abstract
Experiments on superconducting materials have unveiled unique emergent properties when they are driven far from equilibrium. However, a quantitative first-principles treatment that describes experimental observations is lacking. In this work, we develop an ab-initio model for the nonequilibrium response of optically irradiated superconducting films within the framework of conventional electron-phonon-mediated superconductivity, leveraging new numerical techniques to solve the Migdal-Eliashberg equations directly on the real-frequency axis. This enables us to quantitatively reproduce the optical response of superconducting films in pump-probe experiments and validate our approach on measurements of the differential reflectance of Pb and LaH10 in response to a pump excitation. Similar calculations performed on the alkali-doped fulleride K3C60 reveal that a photo-induced superconducting state is generated after irradiation by an ultrafast mid-infrared pulse of sufficient intensity, as reported in prior experimental work. The enhancement in this framework is attributed to the excitation of quasiparticles to energies resonant with the strongest electron-phonon coupling in K3C60, in close analogy to the mechanism for enhancement of superconductivity under microwave irradiation, explaining the nature of the photo-induced superconducting state and elucidating the subsequent quasiparticle and phonon dynamics. Our results suggest that photo-induced superconductivity is accessible in more materials than previously recognized. We demonstrate this by performing calculations on calcium-intercalated graphite, CaC6, and predict a similar photo-induced superconducting gap.
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