posted on 2018-04-23, 00:00authored byXianchong Miao, Guowei Zhang, Fanjie Wang, Hugen Yan, Minbiao Ji
Black
phosphorus is a layered semiconducting material, demonstrating
strong layer-dependent optical and electronic properties. Probing
the photophysical properties on ultrafast time scales is of central
importance in understanding many-body interactions and nonequilibrium
quasiparticle dynamics. Here, we applied temporally, spectrally, and
spatially resolved pump–probe microscopy to study the transient
optical responses of mechanically exfoliated few-layer black phosphorus,
with layer numbers ranging from 2 to 9. We have observed layer-dependent
resonant transient absorption spectra with both photobleaching and
red-shifted photoinduced absorption features, which could be attributed
to band gap renormalization of higher subband transitions. Surprisingly,
coherent phonon oscillations with unprecedented intensities were observed
when the probe photons were in resonance with the optical transitions,
which correspond to the low-frequency layer-breathing mode. Our results
reveal strong Coulomb interactions and electron–phonon couplings
in photoexcited black phosphorus, providing important insights into
the ultrafast optical, nanomechanical, and optoelectronic properties
of this novel two-dimensional material.