Theory for Difference Between Photoinduced Phase and Thermally Excited Phase |
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Authors: | P. Huai K. Nasu |
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Affiliation: | Institute of Materials Structure Science, KEK , The Graduate University for Advanced Studies , Oho 1-1,Ibaraki, Tsukuba , 305-0801 , Japan |
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Abstract: | A possible difference between the photoinduced phase and the thermally excited one is studied by using a two-dimensional extended Peierls-Hubbard model, which includes a strong electron-phonon coupling and a on-site interelectron repulsion, as well as an anharmonic lattice potential. Because of this anharmonicity, the system undergoes a first order phase transition from an insulating CDW state to a metallic one at a high temperature. Although some sign of an SDW order is expected to appear due to this repulsion, it is always hidden in any equilibrium phase of the present system. In fact, it is hidden, not only in the CDW ground state, but also in this metallic one, since the high temperature itself destroys the SDW order, far before the CDW-metal transition occurs, while a photo-excitation at low enough temperature is shown to generate a local metastable SDW domain. Therefore, to observe the presence of such Coulomb interaction and the resultant broken symmetry, a nonequilibrium photoinduced phase is shown to be most straightforward. Thus, the photoinduce phase transition can make an interaction appear as a broken symmetry only in this phase, even though this interaction is almost completely hidden in all the equilibrium phases from low temperature to high ones. |
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Keywords: | Photoinduced Phase Transition Thermal Phase Transition Difference Multi-stable Ground State Broken Symmetry |
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