Abstract

Time-domain investigations of the nonadiabatic coupling between electronic and vibrational degrees of freedom have focused primarily on the formation of electronic superpositions induced by atomic motion. The effect of electronic nonstationary-state dynamics on atomic motion remains unexplored. Here, phase-coherent excitation of the two lowest electronic transitions in semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes by broadband <5-fs pulses directly triggers coherent exciton motion along the axis of the nanotubes. Optical pump-probe spectroscopy with sub-10-fs time resolution reveals that exciton motion selectively excites the high-frequency G mode coherent phonon, in good agreement with results obtained from time-domain ab initio simulations. This observed phenomenon arises from the direct modulation of the C-C interatomic potential by coherent exciton motion on a time scale that is commensurate with atomic motion. Our results suggest the possibility of employing light-field manipulation of electron densities in the non-Born-Oppenheimer regime to initiate selective atomic motion.

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