- Kogar, Anshul;
- Zong, Alfred;
- Dolgirev, Pavel E;
- Shen, Xiaozhe;
- Straquadine, Joshua;
- Bie, Ya-Qing;
- Wang, Xirui;
- Rohwer, Timm;
- Tung, I-Cheng;
- Yang, Yafang;
- Li, Renkai;
- Yang, Jie;
- Weathersby, Stephen;
- Park, Suji;
- Kozina, Michael E;
- Sie, Edbert J;
- Wen, Haidan;
- Jarillo-Herrero, Pablo;
- Fisher, Ian R;
- Wang, Xijie;
- Gedik, Nuh
When electrons in a solid are excited with light, they can alter the free
energy landscape and access phases of matter that are beyond reach in thermal
equilibrium. This accessibility becomes of vast importance in the presence of
phase competition, when one state of matter is preferred over another by only a
small energy scale that, in principle, is surmountable by light. Here, we study
a layered compound, LaTe$_3$, where a small in-plane (a-c plane) lattice
anisotropy results in a unidirectional charge density wave (CDW) along the
c-axis. Using ultrafast electron diffraction, we find that after
photoexcitation, the CDW along the c-axis is weakened and subsequently, a
different competing CDW along the a-axis emerges. The timescales characterizing
the relaxation of this new CDW and the reestablishment of the original CDW are
nearly identical, which points towards a strong competition between the two
orders. The new density wave represents a transient non-equilibrium phase of
matter with no equilibrium counterpart, and this study thus provides a
framework for unleashing similar states of matter that are "trapped" under
equilibrium conditions.