Regensburg 2025 – wissenschaftliches Programm
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O: Fachverband Oberflächenphysik
O 5: Scanning Probe Microscopy: Light-Matter Interactions at the Atomic Scale I
O 5.6: Vortrag
Montag, 17. März 2025, 11:45–12:00, H6
Ultrafast Coulomb blockade in an atomic-scale quantum dot — Jonas Allerbeck1, •Laric Bobzien1, Nils Krane1, S. Eve Ammerman1, Daniel E. Cintron Figueroa2, Joshua Robinson2,3, and Bruno Schuler1 — 1Empa - nanotech@surfaces Laboratory, 8600 Dübendorf, Switzerland — 2Department of Chemistry, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, 16802, PA, USA — 3Department of Physics and Department of Materials Science and Engineering, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, 16802, PA, USA.
Controlling electron dynamics at optical clock rates is a fundamental challenge in lightwave-driven nanoelectronics. At the example of individual selenium vacancies (VacSe) in few-layer tungsten diselenide (WSe2), which are prototypical atomic-scale quantum dots with localized defect states, I present ultrafast charge transfer in the time domain using lightwave-driven scanning tunneling microscopy (LW-STM). Layer-dependent decoupling of VacSe in WSe2 varies the average charge-state lifetime of defect states from 1.2 ps (1L) to 3 ns (4L), showing an unexpected sub-exponential. Picosecond terahertz (THz) source pulses, focused onto the picocavity of the STM, control and read the charge state of individual VacSe quantum dots. THz pump-THz probe time-domain sampling of the defect charge population captures atomic-scale snapshots of the transient Coulomb blockade, a signature of charge transport via quantized defect states. These results open new avenues for exploring charge dynamics and lightwave-driven electronics at the space-time limit.
Keywords: ultrafast scanning probe microscopy; THz-STM; field-driven tunneling; atomic defects; 2D semiconductors