Screening is a ubiquitous phenomenon through which the polarization of bound or mobile charges tends to reduce the strengths of electric fields inside materials. Here, we show how photoexcitation can be used as a knob to transform conventional out-of-plane screening into antiscreening—the amplification of electric fields–in multilayer graphene. We find that, by varying the photoexcitation intensity, multiple nonequilibrium screening regimes can be accessed, including near-zero screening, antiscreening, and overscreening (reversing electric fields). Strikingly, at modest continuous wave photoexcitation intensities, the nonequilibrium polarization states become multistable, hosting light-induced ferroelectriclike steady states with nonvanishing out-of-plane polarization (and band gaps) even in the absence of an externally applied displacement field in nominally inversion symmetric stacks. This rich phenomenology reveals a novel paradigm of dynamical quantum matter that we expect will enable a variety of nonequilibrium broken symmetry phases.
- Received 15 April 2024
- Revised 16 July 2024
- Accepted 20 August 2024
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.133.136901
© 2024 American Physical Society
Condensed Matter, Materials & Applied Physics
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