Pitt Team First to
Detect Exciton in Metal
University of Pittsburgh
PITTSBURGH —June 2, 2014 -- University of Pittsburgh researchers have become the
first to detect a fundamental particle of light-matter interaction in metals,
the exciton. The team will publish its work online June 1 in Nature Physics.
Team gives
a microscopic quantum mechanical description of how light excites electrons in
metals
Joe Miksch,
Mankind has
used reflection of light from a metal mirror on a daily basis for millennia,
but the quantum mechanical magic behind this familiar phenomenon is only now
being uncovered.
Physicists
describe physical phenomena in terms of interactions between fields and
particles, says lead author Hrvoje Petek, Pitt’s Richard King Mellon Professor
in the Department of Physics and Astronomy within Kenneth P. Dietrich School of
Arts and Sciences. When light (an electromagnetic field) reflects from a metal
mirror, it shakes the metal’s free electrons (the particles), and the
consequent acceleration of electrons creates a nearly perfect replica of the
incident light (the reflection).
The classical
theory of electromagnetism provides a good understanding of inputs and outputs
of this process, but a microscopic quantum mechanical description of how the
light excites the electrons is lacking.
Petek’s team of
experimental and theoretical physicists and chemists from the University of
Pittsburgh and Institute of Physics in Zagreb, Croatia, report on how light and
matter interact at the surface of a silver crystal. They observe, for the first
time, an exciton in a metal.
Excitons,
particles of light-matter interaction where light photons become transiently
entangled with electrons in molecules and semiconductors, are known to be
fundamentally important in processes such as plant photosynthesis and optical
communications that are the basis for the Internet and cable TV. The optical
and electronic properties of metals cause excitons to last no longer than
approximately 100 attoseconds (0.1 quadrillionth of a second). Such short
lifetimes make it difficult for scientists to study excitons in metals, but it
also enables reflected light to be a nearly perfect replica of the incoming
light.
Yet, Branko
Gumhalter at the Institute
of Physics predicted, and
Petek and his team experimentally discovered, that the surface electrons of
silver crystals can maintain the excitonic state more than 100 times longer
than the bulk metal, enabling the excitons in metals to be experimentally
captured by a newly developed multidimensional coherent spectroscopic
technique.
The ability to
detect excitons in metals sheds light on how light is converted to electrical
and chemical energy in plants and solar cells, and in the future it may enable
metals to function as active elements in optical communications. In other
words, it may be possible to control how light is reflected from a metal.
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