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Ultrafast electron delocalization induced by a fs laser pulse is a well-known process and is the initial step for important applications such as fragmentation of molecules or laser ablation in solids. It is well understood that an intense fs laser pulse can remove several electrons from an atom within its pulse duration. [1] However, the speed of electron localization out of an electron gas, the capture of an electron by ion, is unknown. Here, we demonstrate that electronic localization out of the conduction band can occur within only a few hundred femtoseconds. This ultrafast electron localization into 4f states has been directly quantified by transient x-ray absorption spectroscopy following photo-excitation of a Eu based correlated metal with a fs laser pulse. Our x-ray experiments show that the driving force for this process is either an ultrafast reduction of the energy of the 4f states, a change of their bandwidth or an increase of the hybridization between the 4f and the 3d states. The observed ultrafast electron localization process raises further basic questions for our understanding of electron correlations and their coupling to the lattice.
We establish that a doping-driven first-order metal-to-metal transition, from a pseudogap metal to Fermi Liquid, can occur in correlated quantum materials. Our result is based on the exact Dynamical Mean Field Theory solution of the Dimer Hubbard Mod
Experimental results on the metal-insulator transition and related phenomena in strongly interacting two-dimensional electron systems are discussed. Special attention is given to recent results for the strongly enhanced spin susceptibility, effective
At the interface between two distinct materials desirable properties, such as superconductivity, can be greatly enhanced, or entirely new functionalities may emerge. Similar to in artificially engineered heterostructures, clean functional interfaces
We study the effect of oxygen vacancies on the electronic structure of the model strongly correlated metal SrVO$_3$. By means of angle-resolved photoemission (ARPES) synchrotron experiments, we investigate the systematic effect of the UV dose on the
The possibility of investigating the dynamics of solids on timescales faster than the thermalization of the internal degrees of freedom has disclosed novel non-equilibrium phenomena that have no counterpart at equilibrium. Transition metal oxides (TM