4.6 Article

Floquet-Bloch resonances in near-petahertz electroabsorption spectroscopy of SiO2

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW B
Volume 107, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.107.184304

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The electric field of an intense laser pulse can modify the electronic properties of materials, allowing for the measurement of the electronic structure on an attosecond timescale. By studying the quasistatic electromodulation spectroscopy based on the Franz-Keldysh effect, it is found that the nonadiabatic limit is determined by resonant transitions between Floquet-Bloch states. Experimental investigation of laser-field-driven fused silica demonstrates the measurement of effective mass, ponderomotive and binding energies of the electron-hole pair on a few-femtosecond timescale.
The electric field of an intense laser pulse can directly modify the electronic properties of materials via electromodulation up to the petahertz regime. In this regime, the energy of the quiver motion of the electron-hole pair is comparable with the photon energy, which results in complex nonadiabatic dynamics. This regime opens opportunities to probe the electronic structure of materials on the attosecond timescale. Here, we show how the quasistatic electromodulation spectroscopy based on the Franz-Keldysh effect (FKE) connects with its nonadiabatic limit, which we find to be determined by resonant transitions between Floquet-Bloch states. This insight can be applied to measure the effective mass, ponderomotive and binding energies of the electron-hole pair on a few-femtosecond timescale. We demonstrate this by experimentally investigating laser-field-driven fused silica, a prototypical material for light-wave electronics, with extreme-ultraviolet attosecond pulse trains. We reproduce the experimental transient absorption spectra with an effective band structure and a dynamical Franz-Keldysh model, offering a simple parametrization for a theoretically challenging but technologically abundant material. Ab initio calculations in alpha-quartz highlight the contributions of specific bands, symmetry, and crystal orientation that are hidden in the experimental data due to randomized crystallographic orientation and finite temporal and spatial coherence. We show that the dynamical FKE can be explained as a third-order nonlinear process in the weak-field regime. The delay-dependent position of the absorption maxima and minima has a minimum tilt angle, determined by transitions between the underlying Floquet-Bloch states. In our analysis, we discuss the main experimental observables and show their connection to the parameters of the solid, providing the basis for nonadiabatic electromodulation spectroscopy.

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