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Topics in Present-day Science Technology and Innovation: Ultrafast Relaxation Processes in Semiconductors

Abstract

The nowadays notable development of all the modern technology, fundamental for the progress and well being of world society, imposes a great deal of stress in the realm of basic Physics, more precisely on Thermo-Mechanical Statistics. In electronics and optoelectronics we face situations involving physical-chemical systems far-removed-from equilibrium, where ultrafast (in pico- and femto-second scale) and non-linear processes are present. Here we describe in an extended overview the question of ultrafast relaxation processes in the excited plasma in semiconductors.

ultrafast relaxation; semiconductors; nonequilibrium thermodynamic


1 Introduction

Processes involved in nowadays advanced technology are mostly associated to optical and transport properties in systems far-away-from equilibrium, displaying ultrafast (pico to femto-second time scales) relaxation processes, being in constrained geometries (nanometric scales), and presenting nonlinear dynamic behavior. This is to be expected in multiple situations involving technological applications and their end use in manufacturing processes.

This sets a certain stress on the associated basic Physics, or more specifically on nonequilibrium statistical thermo-mechanics, and we may mention the topics of1Rodrigues CG, Silva AAP, Silva CAB, Vasconcellos AR, Ramos JG and Luzzi R. The role of nonequilibrium thermo-mechanical statistics in modern technologies and industrial processes: an overview. Brazilian Journal of Physics. 2010; 40(1):63-91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S0103-97332010000100011.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S0103-97332010...

a) Ultrafast Relaxation Processes in Semiconductors

b) Nonlinear Transport in Highly-Polar Semiconductors

c) Low-Dimensional Complex Semiconductors

d) Nonlinear Higher-Order Thermo-Hydrodynamics

e) Nonequilibrium Bose-Einstein-like Condensation and Complexity in Condensed Matter

f) Thermo-Statistics of Complex Structured Systems

g) Nonconventional Thermo-Hydrodynamics

In this Feature Article we consider in detail the thermo-statistical aspects of the ultrafast evolution of the nonequilibrium state of highly photoexcited polar semiconductors under high levels of excitation.

These processes can be evidenced, and its evolution followed, in experiments of ultrafast laser spectroscopy. On this we reproduce parts of the Introduction of the article "Big Payoffs in a Flash" by J. M. Hopkins and W. Sibbett in Scientific American, September 2000 issue, pages 54 to 61, namely

"How long did it take you to read this sentence? Just recognizing the first letter took only milliseconds. Around 0.05 millisecond, or 50 microseconds, passes each time chemicals diffuse across a synapse, carrying a signal from one neuron to another in your brain. Are you holding the magazine at a comfortable reading distance? It takes light one or two nanoseconds to travel from the page to your eye and about 20 picoseconds to pass through the lens in your eye. And yet these brief natural events are epically long compared with the shortest man-made events, which proceed 1,000-fold more swiftly: pulses of laser light that last for on1y a few femtoseconds (quadrillionths of a second). The science and technology of ultrashort-pulse lasers have enjoyed much exciting progress since they were developed in the mid-1960s. In particular, the past decade has seen pulses shorter than 10 femtoseconds and the emergence of a new generation of versatile, compact ultrashort-pulse lasers – a revolutionary change from their large, temperamental, power-hungry ancestors. Such laser designs, which make use of sophisticated nonlinear optical phenomena and concurrent advances in diode lasers, increasingly meet the stringent specifications and reliability necessary for many industrial and medical applications. As we enter the 21st century, ultrashort-pulse lasers are becoming more impressive in scope and intensity, producing beams that span the electromagnetic spectrum from X-rays to T-rays (terahertz radiation, beyond infrared) and generating optical peak powers as colossal as petawatts (billions of megawatts). As a result, many new applications in physics, chemistry, biology, medicine, and digital optical technology are emerging and attracting worldwide interest in science and industry."2Hopkings J and Sibbet W. Ultrashort-pulse lasers: big payoffs in a flash. Scientific American. 2000; 283:54.

Studies of the optical and transport properties of semiconductors under high levels of excitation have shown a pleiad of novel and quite interesting features evidenced in ultrafast laser spectroscopy (UFLS). This powerful experimental technique involves the interaction of matter with radiation, which is one of the most studied areas of physics and has played a decisive role in the development of modern physics. However, until the second half of the 20th century, all processes investigated have been associated with weak radiation fields for which the usual perturbation theory, and the accompanying linear response theory near equilibrium, is applicable. Although this approach has been remarkably successful in explaining a great variety of phenomena, in the last several decades the new and greatly improved technological situation involving the advent of lasers, providing us with sources of intense electromagnetic radiation, requires new and sophisticated theoretical approaches, that is, a response theory capable to deal with arbitrarily far-from-equilibrium systems. Moreover, the notable improvements in time-resolved laser spectroscopy have made it a very useful tool to be used with a high degree of confidence in the investigation of very rapid microscopic mechanisms in the physical and biological realms2Hopkings J and Sibbet W. Ultrashort-pulse lasers: big payoffs in a flash. Scientific American. 2000; 283:54.

Alfano RR, editor. Biological events probed by ultrafast laser spectroscopy. New York: Academic Press; 1982.

Alfano RR, editor. Semiconductors probed by ultrafast laser spectroscopy. New York: Academic Press; 1984. v. 1.

Alfano RR, editor. Semiconductors probed by ultrafast laser spectroscopy. New York: Academic Press; 1985. v. 2.
-6Shank CV. Measurement of ultrafast phenomena in the femtosecond time domain. Science. 1983; 219(4588):1027-1031. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.219.4588.1027. PMid:17811730
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.

In particular, ultrafast responses and functioning under far-from-equilibrium conditions in semiconductor systems pose new, interesting, and quite engaging problems in the physics of condensed matter. These systems, as we have already emphasized in several occasions, become an extremely useful testing ground for theoretical ideas in the domain of nonequilibrium statistical thermodynamics of many-body systems. Besides the interest in the comprehension of the basic physical principles underlying these significant situations, there exists a parallel relevant technological interest arising out of the fact that semiconductors working in nonequilibrium conditions have multiple practical applications in electronic devices. Picosecond and femtosecond laser spectroscopy allows to probe ultrafast nonlinear irreversible processes in matter, thus providing an extremely adequate and sophisticated experimental instrument for the study of the nonequilibrium thermodynamic evolution of highly excited semiconductor samples7Luzzi R and Vasconcellos AR. Ultrafast transient response of nonequilibrium plasma in semiconductors. In: Alfano RR, editor. Semiconductor processes probed by ultrafast laser spectroscopy. New York: Academic; 1984. p. 135-169. v. 1.

Luzzi R. Ultrafast relaxation processes in semiconductors. In: Pilkhun M, editor. High excitation and short pulse phenomena. Amsterdam: North Holland; 1985.

Luzzi R. Nonequilibrium plasma in photoexcited semiconductors. In: Casas-Vazquez J and Jou D, editors. Recent developments in nonequilibrium thermodynamics. Berlin: Springer; 1986.

10 Algarte AC, Vasconcellos AR and Luzzi R. Kinetics of hot elementary excitations in photoexcited polar semiconductors. Physica Status Solidi. 1992; 173(2):487-514. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pssb.2221730202.
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11 Rodrigues CG, Freire VN, Costa JAP, Vasconcellos AR and Luzzi R. Hot Electron Dynamics in Zincblende and Wurtzite GaN. Physica Status Solidi. 1999; 216(1):35-39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1521-3951(199911)216:1<35::AID-PSSB35>3.0.CO;2-2.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1521-395...

12 Rodrigues CG, Vasconcellos AR, Luzzi R and Freire VN. Urbach's tail in III-nitrides under an electric field. Journal of Applied Physics. 2001; 90(4):1879. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1384859.
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-1313 Vasconcellos AR, Luzzi R, Rodrigues CG and Freire VN. Hot-phonon bottleneck in the photoinjected plasma in GaN. Applied Physics Letters. 2003; 82(15):2455. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1566467.
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.

The theories appropriate for the treatment of these far-from-equilibrium many-body systems need make it possible to determine the detailed time evolution of the nonlinear irreversible processes that take place in the system while it is probed. This is a quite attractive and actual problem connected with the nonequilibrium nonlinear statistical mechanics and thermodynamics of dynamical processes. UFLS studies of the highly photoexcited plasma in semiconductors (HEPS, which consists of electron and hole pairs – as mobile carriers – created by an intense laser pulse which are moving in the background of lattice vibrations) have received particular attention since the 1970's. These studies provide information on the kinetic of relaxation of the photoexcited carriers and of the nonequilibrium phonon field, as well as on ultrafast transient transport.

Before proceeding further, and closing this Introduction, we recall our previous statement that we are dealing with open systems in far-from-equilibrium conditions, thus requiring a theoretical approach based on a nonlinear nonequilibrium thermodynamics, and an accompanying statistical mechanics, able to account for the rapid time evolution of the dissipative processes that unfold in these systems. In this context it is quite appropriate to quote Ryogo Kubo's statement in the opening address of the Oji Seminar1414 Kubo R. Opening address to Oji seminar on non-linear non-equilibrium statistical mechanics. Progress of Theoretical Physics. 1978; 64:1-11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1143/PTPS.64.1.
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: "statistical mechanics of nonlinear nonequilibrium phenomena is just in its infancy [and] further progress can only be hoped by close cooperation with experiment". UFLS is a precious tool to carry on Kubo's advice, and we may add that since 1978, the year the above sentence was expressed, a good deal of progress have been attained in the development of nonequilibrium statistical mechanics and irreversible thermodynamics. Concerning the first one we may mention the construction of a generalized Gibbs-Boltzmann- style formalism which can be encompassed within Jaynes' Predictive Statistical Mechanics1515 Jaynes ET. A backward look to the future. In: Grandy WT, Jr. and Milonni PW. Physics and probability. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press; 1993. p. 261-275.,1616 Jaynes ET. Predictive statistical physics. In: Moore ET and Scully MO, editors. Frontiers of nonequilibrium statistical physics. New York: Plenum; 1986.,1717 Jaynes ET. Macroscopic prediction. In: Haken H, editor. Complex systems: operational approaches. Berlin: Springer; 1985., the so-called Non-Equilibrium Statistical Ensemble Formalism (NESEF for short), reviewed in Luzzi et al.1818 Luzzi R, Vasconcellos AR and Ramos JG. Predictive statistical mechanics: a nonequilibrium statistical ensemble formalism. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic; 2002.,1919 Luzzi R, Vasconcellos AR and Ramos JG. The theory of irreversible processes: foundations of a non-equilibrium statistical ensemble formalism. Rivista del Nuovo Cimento. 2006; 29:1.. The NESEF is a powerful formalism that provides an elegant, practical, and physically clear picture for describing irreversible processes, adequate to deal with a large class of experimental situations, as an example in semiconductors far from equilibrium, obtaining good agreement in comparisons with other theoretical and experimental results2020 Rodrigues CG, Vasconcellos AR and Luzzi R. A kinetic theory for nonlinear quantum transport. Transport Theory and Statistical Physics. 2000; 29(7):733-757. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00411450008200000.
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21 Rodrigues CG, Freire VN, Vasconcellos AR and Luzzi R. Velocity overshoot onset in nitride semiconductors. Applied Physics Letters. 2000; 76(14):1893. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.126203.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.126203...

22 Rodrigues CG, Freire VN, Vasconcellos ÁR and Luzzi R. Electron mobility in nitride materials. Brazilian Journal of Physics. 2002; 32(2a):439-441. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S0103-97332002000200056.
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23 Rodrigues CG, Fernandez JRL, Leite JR, Chitta VA, Freire VN, Vasconcellos AR, et al. Hole mobility in zincblende c–GaN. Journal of Applied Physics. 2004; 95(9):4914. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1690865.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1690865...

24 Rodrigues CG, Vasconcellos AR and Luzzi R. Ultrafast relaxation kinetics of photoinjected plasma in III-nitrides. Journal of Physics. D, Applied Physics. 2005; 38(19):3584-3589. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0022-3727/38/19/007.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0022-3727/38/1...

25 Rodrigues CG, Vasconcellos AR, Luzzi R and Freire VN. Nonlinear transport properties of III-nitrides in electric field. Journal of Applied Physics. 2005; 98(4):043702. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1999024.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1999024...

26 Rodrigues CG, Vasconcellos AR, Luzzi R and Freire VN. Nonlinear transport properties of doped III-N and GaAs polar semiconductors: A comparison. Journal of Applied Physics. 2005; 98(4):043703. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1999025.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1999025...

27 Rodrigues CG. Electron mobility in n-doped zinc sulphide. Microelectronics Journal. 2006; 37(7):657-660. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mejo.2005.05.015.
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28 Rodrigues CG, Vasconcellos AR and Luzzi R. Nonlinear charge transport in III-N semiconductors: mobility, diffusion, and a generalized Einstein relation. Journal of Applied Physics. 2006; 99(7):73701. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2186377.
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29 Rodrigues CG, Vasconcellos AR and Luzzi R. Non-linear electron mobility in n-doped III-nitrides. Brazilian Journal of Physics. 2006; 36:255.

30 Rodrigues CG, Vasconcellos AR and Luzzi R. Nonlinear transport in n-III-nitrides: selective amplification and emission of coherent LO phonons. Solid State Communications. 2006; 140(3-4):135-140. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ssc.2006.08.015.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ssc.2006.08....

31 Rodrigues CG, Vasconcellos AR and Luzzi R. Nonlinear hole transport and nonequilibrium thermodynamics in group III-nitrides under the influence of electric fields. Journal of Applied Physics. 2007; 102(7):073714. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2785976.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2785976...

32 Rodrigues CG, Vasconcellos AR, Luzzi R and Freire VN. Transient transport in III-nitrides: interplay of momentum and energy relaxation times. Journal of Physics Condensed Matter. 2007; 19(34):346214. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0953-8984/19/34/346214.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0953-8984/19/3...

33 Rodrigues CG, Vasconcellos AR and Luzzi R. Theoretical calculations of nonlinear electronic transport behavior in III-nitrides: GaN and AlN. Physica Status Solidi. 2009; 246(2):417-425. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pssb.200844157.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pssb.200844157...

34 Rodrigues CG, Vasconcellos AR and Luzzi R. Evolution kinetics of nonequilibrium longitudinal-optical phonons generated by drifting electrons in III-nitrides: longitudinal-optical-phonon resonance. Journal of Applied Physics. 2010; 108(3):033716. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3462501.
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-3535 Rodrigues CG, Vasconcellos AR and Luzzi R. Drifting electron excitation of acoustic phonons: Cerenkov-like effect in n-GaN. Journal of Applied Physics. 2013; 113(11):113701. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4795271.
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. On the other hand, irreversible thermodynamics is dealt with at the phenomenological level in the framework of several approaches, a quite promissing one consisting in the so-called Extended Irreversible Thermodynamics3636 Jou D, Casas-Vazquez J and Lebon G. Extended irreversible thermodynamics. Berlin: Springer; 1993., and its microscopic foundation at the mechano-statistical level, namely the so-called Informational Statistical Thermodynamics (sometimes referred to as Information-Theoretic Thermodynamics)3737 Luzzi R, Vasconcellos AR and Ramos JG. Statistical foundations of irreversible thermodynamics. Stuttgart: Teubner-Bertelsmann-Springer; 2000.

38 Luzzi R, Vasconcellos AR and Ramos JG. Irreversible thermodynamics in a nonequilibrium statistical ensemble formalism. Rivista del Nuovo Cimento. 2001; 24:1.

39 Vasconcellos ÁR, Luzzi R and Garca-Colin LS. Microscopic approach to irreversible thermodynamics. II. An example from semiconductor physics. Physical Review. A. 1991; 43(12):6633-6641. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.43.6633. PMid:9905015
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40 Vasconcellos AR, Luzzi R and Garcia-Colin LS. Microscopic approach to irreversible thermodynamics IV: an example of generalized diffusion and wave equations. Journal of Non-Equilibrium Thermodynamics. 1995; 20:119.

41 Vasconcellos ÁR, Luzzi R and Garcia-Colin LS. Equations of evolution nonlinear in the fluxes in informational statistical thermodynamics. International Journal of Modern Physics B. 1995; 09(16):1945-1958. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/S0217979295000793.
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42 Vasconcellos AR, Luzzi R and Garcia-Colin LS. Diffusion and mobility and generalized Einstein relation. Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications. 1995; 221(4):495-510. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0378-4371(95)00164-6.
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-4343 Tenan MA, Vasconcellos AR and Luzzi R. Statistical-mechanical foundations for a generalized thermodynamics of dissipative processes Progress of Physics. 1997; 47:1. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/prop.2190450103.
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.

2 Highly Excited Plasma in Semiconductors (HEPS)

Let us explicitly consider the case of highly excited plasma in semiconductors. These are quite interesting physical systems, among other reasons because of the flexibility in the choice of a number of parameters such as Fermi energy, plasma frequency, energy dispersion relations, cyclotron frequency, different types of carriers and effective masses, etc.4444 Platzmann PM and Wolff PA. Waves and interactions in solid state plasmas. Solid State Physics. 1973; 13:1.. ln this plasma in solid state the presence of the lattice introduces noticeable differences in comparison with a gaseous plasma. Typically it produces a background dielectric constant of the order of 10, and exciton effective masses one tenth the value of the free electron mass. Thus, the characteristic atomic units for length and energy, the Bohr radius and the Rydberg, become the excitonic radius, rx, and excitonic Rydberg, Ryx, which are roughly 100 times larger and a hundreth times smaller than the corresponding atomic units respectively. Hence, the so called metallic densities, namely, situations when the intercarrier spacing, rs, measured in units of rx, is in the range 1 to 54444 Platzmann PM and Wolff PA. Waves and interactions in solid state plasmas. Solid State Physics. 1973; 13:1.

45 Ginzburg VL. Key problems in physics and astrophysics. Moscow: Mir; 1976.

46 Pines D. Elementary excitations in solids. Reading: Benjamin; 1964.
-4747 Hedin L and Lundquist S. Solid state physics. New York: Academic; 1969. v. 23., arise at quite accessible laboratory conditions for concentrations of roughly 1016 carriers per cm3 and up.

In Figure 1 we depict the situation to be expected in a typical pump-probe experiment. It describes a sample consisting of a direct-gap polar semiconductor where a concentration n of electron-hole pairs is generated by a pulse of intense laser light. Direct absorption of one photon occurs if ωL>EG where ωL is the laser frequency and EG the semiconductor energy gap. Excitation by means of nonlinear effects such as two-photon absorption or second harmonic generation, (ωL<EG but 2ωL>EG) allows for bulk excitation with a good degree of homogeneity. The sample is illuminated by a second laser (probe) of weak intensity, so as to avoid any noticeable modification of the nonequilibrium state of the system produced by the intense pulse from the pumping laser, and an optical response is recorded. Measurements of luminescence do not require a laser probe.

Figure 1
Schematic description of a pump-probe experiment in UFLS performed on a semiconductor sample. Several channels involving energy transfer are indicated.

On absorption of the pumped laser light the electrons make transitions from the valence band to the conduction band. These carriers (electrons and holes), with a concentration n, are initially narrowly distributed around the energy levels centered on, say, ϵe in the conduction band and ϵh in the valence band, with ϵeϵhωL (or 2ωL). Next they are rapidly redistributed in energy space due to the strong long-range Coulomb interaction among them4848 Elci A, Scully MD, Smirl MD and Matter JC. Ultrafast transient response of solid-state plasmas. I. Germanium, theory, and experiment. Physical Review B: Condensed Matter and Materials Physics. 1977; 16(1):191-221. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.16.191.
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,4949 Collet J, Amand T and Pugnet M. Numerical approach to non-equilibrium carrier relaxation in picosecond and subpicosecond physics. Physics Letters. [Part A]. 1983; 96(7):368-374. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0375-9601(83)90012-9.
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,5050 Pötz W. Hot-phonon effects in bulk GaAs. Physical Review B: Condensed Matter and Materials Physics. 1987; 36(9):5016-5019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.36.5016.
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. Figure 2 provides a description of the nonequilibrium phase diagram of a photoexcited semiconductor.

Figure 2
Schematic description of the nonequilibrium phase diagram of the carrier system in a photoexcited semiconductor. In the ordinate, the effective temperature amounts to a measure of the kinetic energy in excess of equilibrium pumped by the laser source.

Once the experiment is set, as described by Figure 1, the connection with theory proceeds via a response function theory. For systems slightly deviated from equilibrium exact close expressions for their response functions to mechanical perturbations can be obtained in the form of correlation functions in equilibrium5151 Martin PC. Measurements and correlation functions. In: Witt C. and Balian R, editors. Many-body physics. New York: Gordon and Breach; 1968).. A practical way to calculate them is the double-time thermodynamic Green function formalism of Bogoliubov and Tyablikov, described in an already classic paper by Zubarev5252 Zubarev DN. Double-time Green functions in statistical physics. Uspekhi Fiziologicheskikh Nauk. 1960; 71(5):71-116. http://dx.doi.org/10.3367/UFNr.0071.196005c.0071.
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,5353 Zubarev DN. Double-time green functions in statistical physics. Soviet Physics - Uspekhi. 1960; 3(3):320-345. http://dx.doi.org/10.1070/PU1960v003n03ABEH003275.
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. The actual calculation may be difficult for the case of interacting many-body systems but it is formally closed at this level. However, measurements can be performed on systems strongly departed from equilibrium, when the responses of the systems depend on their instantaneous and local nonequilibrium state, as it is the case of highly excited semiconductors when spectra obtained by means of ultrafast laser spectroscopy depend on the characteristics of the nonequilibrium distributions of the elementary excitations during the lapse of instrumental-resolution time.

Once a HEPS has been created, to describe its macroscopic state it is a prerequisite to define the basis set of macrovariables, that allow to characterized the nonequilibrium thermodynamic state of the system, relevant to the application of the NESEF formalism. As a general rule, according to the formalism one chooses a set of variables to which one has a direct or indirect access in the measurement procedure restricted by the experimental set up. In Figure 1 the main energy relaxation channels between the sample subsystems an between these and external reservoirs (thermostat and pumping laser) are indicated. Since the recorded spectra is averaged over the finite volume observed by the measuring apparatus there is no experimental access to the local hydrodynamic properties of the HEPS; this would be the case when performing space-resolved measurements. The characterization of the macroscopic state of the system is a crucial step in the theory. This question has been discussed elsewhere1818 Luzzi R, Vasconcellos AR and Ramos JG. Predictive statistical mechanics: a nonequilibrium statistical ensemble formalism. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic; 2002.,1919 Luzzi R, Vasconcellos AR and Ramos JG. The theory of irreversible processes: foundations of a non-equilibrium statistical ensemble formalism. Rivista del Nuovo Cimento. 2006; 29:1.,5454 Luzzi R, Vasconcellos AR, Casas-Vazquez J and Jou D. Thermodynamic variables in the context of a nonequilibrium statistical ensemble approach. The Journal of Chemical Physics. 1997; 107(18):7383. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.474976.
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,5555 Luzzi R, Vasconcellos ÁR, Jou D and Casas-Vázquez J. On the selection of the state space in nonequilibrium thermodynamics. Physica A. 1998; 248(1-2):111-137. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0378-4371(97)00530-X.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0378-4371(97)...
, and, for the particular case of the HEPS in Vasconcellos et al.5656 Vasconcellos AR, Algarte AC and Luzzi R. On the relaxation time hierarchy in dissipative systems: an example from semiconductor physics. Physica A. 1990; 166(3):517-539. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0378-4371(90)90071-Y.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0378-4371(90)9...
. The Figure 3 reproduces the chain of successive contracted descriptions appropriate for HEPS.

Figure 3
Schematic description of the successive kinetic stages in HEPS along its evolution in a pump-probe experiment.

We have then to consider five steps, namely:

2.1 The initial stage

At this point the state of the system is highly correlated, the nonequilibrium processes are determined by very many independent quantities, and there is no satisfactory way to deal with the problem in this stage.

2.2 First kinetic stage

In HEPS we need to consider several nonequilibrium subsystems, composing the electron fluid and the ions. As well known, the dynamics of the latter can be described in terms of normal modes of vibration, or, in quantized form, by the different branches of acoustic and optical phonons. There remain the relatively weak anharmonic and electron-phonon interactions. Hence, practically, from the very outset the phonon system can be described in terms of one-particle reduced density functions. A different situation arises for the electron fluid as a result of the presence of the strong Coulomb interaction. In this case, we must first look for a characteristic time, say, τ1~r0/vav, to elapse for a description in terms of a one-particle reduced density function to be possible. In this expression, vav is the average velocity which can be estimated to be the Fermi velocity vF=(/m)(3πn)1/3 in the highly degenerate limit or the thermal velocity vth=3kBT/m in the classical limit. For the collision length r0, we can think of the Fermi-Thomas screening length, λTF=ε0mvth2/6πne2, in the first case and Debye-Hückel screening length, λDH=ε0mvth2/4πne2, in the second case5757 Ziman JM. Electrons and phonons. Oxford: Clarendon; 1960.. In these expressions e is the absolute value of the electron charge, m* the carrier (electron or hole) effective mass, ε0 is the static dielectric background constant and n the concentration of photoinjected carriers. It follows that in both extreme limits one finds that τ1~1/ωpl, where ωpl=4πne2/ε0m is the plasma frequency. This is a quite interesting result implying that we may expect to describe the electron fluid in terms of one-particle reduced density matrix in time scales of the order of the period of an electronic plasma wave. In other words, the first kinetic stage for the electron system sets in on time scales necessary for the onset of collective motion. For typical semiconductors ε0~10, m*~0.1, and then:

τ1~1ωpl~1.8×105n , (1)

where n is the number of carriers per cubic centimeter. For several values of the concentration we find the following values: (1) n=1017cm3, τ1~6×1014s; (2) n=1018cm3, τ1~1×1014s; (3) n=1019cm3, τ1~6×1015s, and for very high concentrations, say n=1022cm3, it follows that τ1~2×1016s. This tells us that with laser spectroscopy, attaining time resolutions in the femtosecond time scale, the usual single-particle description of the electron system in semiconductors (solids in general) may become inappropriate for not sufficiently high densities.

When the single-partic1e description can be used, the electrons are described in terms of Landau quasi-particles forming a Fermi fluid5858 Cohen MH. Topics in the theory of magnetism. In: Marshall W, editor. Theory of magnetism in transition metals. New York: Academic Press; 1967. in single electron Bloch-band states. It can be notice that the production of photoinjected carriers in HEPS modifies the single-electron Bloch energy bands. In particular, a shrinkage of the forbidden energy gap should occur, which can be put into evidence in measurements of the luminescence spectra5959 Meneses EA, Jannuzzi N, Ramos JG, Luzzi R and Leite RCC. Many-body and hot-phonon effects in the radiative emission spectrum of CdS under high excitation intensities. Physical Review B: Condensed Matter and Materials Physics. 1975; 11(6):2213-2221. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.11.2213.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.11.22...
.

Finally, it should be remarked that Landau's Fermi liquid approach to the electron system (quasi-partic1e and collective excitations) has been extremely successful in dealing with the physical behavior of solid state matter in normal, magnetic, and superconducting states.

2.3 Second kinetic stage

Because of the strong Coulomb interaction we may expect a very short time between intercarrier collisions mediated by it, and then a further contraction in the description of the macrostate of the carriers' subsystem should be possible. For the case of homogeneous HEPS, one may expect that such a description can be made in terms of the diagonal elements of the one-particle reduced density function, i.e. the number occupation function f(ϵ;t), where ϵ is the energy of the quasi-particle state. This nonequilibrium distribution can be fully characterized by the nonequilibrium thermodynamic variables that NESEF introduces, and whose evolution while the experiment is being performed – evolution which is a consequence of the dissipative effects that are developing in the system – , is completely determined within the scope of the nonlinear quantum kinetic theory based on NESEF as previously described. It is worth recalling that the Lagrange multiplier associated with the energy operator can be interpreted as the reciprocal of a nonequilibrium thermodynamic intensive variable playing the role of a temperature-like quantity, usually referred to as a quasitemperature. Hence, within NESEF is given a more rigorous meaning to such concept which was introduced on phenomenological basis, and used in different contexts, by several authors: H. B. G. Casimir and F. K. du Pre6060 Casimir HGB. On onsager's principle of microscopic reversibility. Reviews of Modern Physics. 1945; 17(2-3):343-350. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/RevModPhys.17.343.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/RevModPhys.17....
for nuclear spins; C. S. Wang-Chang and G. E. Uhlenbeck6161 Wang-Chang CS, Uhlenbeck GE and Boer J. In: Boer J and Uhlenbeck GE, editors. Studies of statistical mechanics. Amsterdam: North Holland; 1964. v. 2. for molecules; L. D. Landau6262 Landau LD. Cyclotron waves in plasma. Journal of Experimental and Theoretical Physics. 1937; 7:203. for plasmas; H. Fröhlich6363 Fröhlich H. On the theory of dielectric breakdown in solids. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences. 1947; 188(1015):521-532. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspa.1947.0023.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspa.1947.0023...
for electrons excited in strong electric fields; V. A. Shklovskii6464 Shklovskii VA. Soviet. Physics of the Solid State. 1976; 17:2040. for electrons in superconductors; J. Shah and R. C. C. Leite6565 Shah J and Leite RCC. Radiative recombination from photoexcited hot carriers in GaAs. Physical Review Letters. 1969; 22(24):1304-1307. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.22.1304.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.22...
for photoexcited carriers; J. Shah, R. C. C. Leite, and J. F. Scott6666 Shah J, Leite RCC and Scott JF. Photoexcited hot LO phonons in GaAs. Solid State Communications. 1970; 8(14):1089-1093. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(70)90002-5.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(70)9...
for photoexcited phonons. We also call the attention to the fact that HEPS are, at the microscopic quantum-mechanical level, dealt with in the Random Phase Approximation (RPA, sometimes referred to as the generalized time-dependent Hartree-Fock approach); on this we can highlight the books by D. Pines and P. Nozières6767 Pines D and Nozières P. The theory of quantum liquids. New York: W. A. Benjamin; 1966., Hedin & Lindquist4747 Hedin L and Lundquist S. Solid state physics. New York: Academic; 1969. v. 23., among others. Hence, the description of the system can be done in terms of only the single-particle reduced density function. For the carriers, which are fermions, it follows for f(ϵ;t) that

fe(h)(ϵ;t)=11+exp{β*(t)(ϵμe(h)*(t))} , (2)

which resembles a time-dependent Fermi-Dirac distribution, with β*(t), and μ*(t) connected to the average energy and density by

E(t)=0ϵ[ge(ϵ)fe(ϵ;t)+gh(ϵ)fh(ϵ;t)]dϵ , (3)
n(t)=1V0ge(ϵ)fe(ϵ;t)dϵ=1V0gh(ϵ)fh(ϵ;t)dϵ. (4)

Given the amount of pumped energy and carrier concentration at a given time, Equations 3 and 4 allow for the determination of the corresponding intensive thermodynamic variables (Lagrange multipliers) β*(t), μe*(t) and μh*(t). V is the volume of the system, and g(ϵ) is the density of states function. The time τ2, or carrier-carrier collision time, for the establishment of this second kinetic stage can be estimated theoretically and experimentally under given conditions. Measurements of gain spectra in platelets of CdS, like the one given in Figure 4 show a long tail in the low-energy side of the spectrum, below the position (indicated by an arrow) that should correspond to the forbidden energy gap6868 Motisuke P, Argüello CA and Luzzi R. Effect of excited electron states lifetime on gain spectra of EHL in CdS. Solid State Communications. 1977; 23(9):617-620. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(77)90532-4.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(77)9...
. It arises as a result of the nonstationary character of the carrier energy states, due to relaxation resulting from interactions with impurities and phonons, and the Coulomb interaction between them. The first two interactions are expected to be small (undoped sample and low lattice temperature) compared with the last one. Thus, a fitting of the observed spectrum (full continuous line) assigning a width Γ to the one-particle energy levels permits to estimate τ2~/Γ~4×1013s, i.e. roughly a half picosecond.

Figure 4
Gain-absorption spectrum of CdS in pump-probe experiment. Values of the laser power I, reservoir temperature Tb, carrier concentration n, carrier quasitemperature T*, and reciprocal of the carrier lifetime, Γ, are shown in the upper left inset. The position of the renormalized band gap is indicated. (Motisuke6868 Motisuke P, Argüello CA and Luzzi R. Effect of excited electron states lifetime on gain spectra of EHL in CdS. Solid State Communications. 1977; 23(9):617-620. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(77)90532-4.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(77)9...
).

Elci et al.4848 Elci A, Scully MD, Smirl MD and Matter JC. Ultrafast transient response of solid-state plasmas. I. Germanium, theory, and experiment. Physical Review B: Condensed Matter and Materials Physics. 1977; 16(1):191-221. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.16.191.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.16.19...
have also evaluated, for the case of GaAs, the carrier-carrier collision time using the Golden Rule averaged over the nonequilibrium macrostate using different forms of distributions of carriers in the energy space, in the usual conditions of pump-probe experiments. They obtained values for τ2 which are also of the order of a fraction of picosecond.

Finally, Collet et al.4949 Collet J, Amand T and Pugnet M. Numerical approach to non-equilibrium carrier relaxation in picosecond and subpicosecond physics. Physics Letters. [Part A]. 1983; 96(7):368-374. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0375-9601(83)90012-9.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0375-9601(83)9...
have calculated the time evolution of fe(ϵ;t) in GaAs, starting from an initial condition with electrons and holes distributed in a small region in energy around the values in energy of the conduction and valence states separated by photon energy ωL. According to their results, the carrier distribution function evolves to achieve a near Fermi-Dirac-like distribution in roughly 5×1013s for n=3×1017cm3, and roughly 10-12s for concentrations in the range of 1016cm-3.

All these results show then that in typical conditions, say n1016cm-3 and moderate to high-excitation energies, internal thermalization of the carrier subsystem in HEPS follows in the subpicosecond time scale, thus allowing for a contracted description of its macroscopic state in terms of the quasitemperature and the two quasi-chemical potentials.

Moreover, using this description for the electron subsystem it is possible to obtain a very good agreement between calculation and experimental data in experiments of luminescence in CdS5959 Meneses EA, Jannuzzi N, Ramos JG, Luzzi R and Leite RCC. Many-body and hot-phonon effects in the radiative emission spectrum of CdS under high excitation intensities. Physical Review B: Condensed Matter and Materials Physics. 1975; 11(6):2213-2221. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.11.2213.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.11.22...
, where a single-particle approximation was used together with Hedin's proposal6969 Hedin L. New method for calculating the one-particle green's function with application to the electron-gas problem. Physical Review A. 1965; 139(3A):796. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRev.139.A796.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRev.139.A7...
. Figure 5 shows recorded spectra and the theoretical curves; the carrier quasi-temperature T* is obtained from the slope of the high-energy side of the spectrum. The successive shoulders on the low-energy side of the spectrum are longitudinal-optical (LO) phonon-assisted replicas; the finite lifetime of the elementary excitations, not considered in the calculations, should smooth out these shoulders bringing them in better accord with the experimental data. Arrows indicate the position of the peak in the luminescence spectra, whose shift is shown in Figure 6, where κ is the concentration dependent Fermi wave number multiplied by the electron spacing rs in units of the exciton Bohr's radius. Hedin's approach6969 Hedin L. New method for calculating the one-particle green's function with application to the electron-gas problem. Physical Review A. 1965; 139(3A):796. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRev.139.A796.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRev.139.A7...
was used to calculate the forbidden energy gap shrinkage due to Coulomb correlations, and this together with the additional shift produced by the superposition of the phonon-assisted replicas produces a very good agreement with experiment.

Figure 5
The theoretical and experimental luminescence spectra of CdS for increasing, from (d) to (a), laser-pumping power: (a) κ = 0.96, T* = 1790 K, (b) κ = 0.64, T* = 680K, (c) κ = 0.48, T* = 295K, (d) κ = 0.32, T* = 170 K. Parameter κ is the Fermi wave number multiplied by rs, the electron spacing in units of the excitonic Bohr radius. The arrow indicates the position of the peak value (Meneses5959 Meneses EA, Jannuzzi N, Ramos JG, Luzzi R and Leite RCC. Many-body and hot-phonon effects in the radiative emission spectrum of CdS under high excitation intensities. Physical Review B: Condensed Matter and Materials Physics. 1975; 11(6):2213-2221. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.11.2213.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.11.22...
).
Figure 6
In the case of the experimental results, it is shown here the calculated peak position of the luminescence spectra of CdS as a function of the parameter κ: (o) including Coulomb correlation only, and (+) idem plus electron-phonon as described in the text. Parameter κ is the Fermi wavenumber multiplied by rs, the electron spacing in units of the excitonic Bohr radius.

Concerning the phonon subsystem, anharmonic interaction between phonons is weak and so we cannot expect a very rapid thermalization of them. Furthermore, the different branches have different behavior, and the interaction with carriers plays an important role. Interaction of carriers with optical phonons (via deformation potential and Fröhlich interaction) produces a rate of energy transfer much higher than that due to the interaction of carriers with acoustic phonons7070 Algarte AC. Cooling of hot carriers in highly photoexcited semiconductors. Physical Review B: Condensed Matter and Materials Physics. 1988; 38(3):2162-2165. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.38.2162.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.38.21...
. Hence, the transfer of the excess energy of the carriers to the thermal bath follows through the indirect channel carriers-to-optical phonons, from the latter to acoustic phonons (via anharmonic interactions) and finally to the thermal reservoir (via heat diffusion).

Figure 7 show the evolution of the LO phonon population (expressed in terms of a quasitemperature Tq*(t) for a few values of the phonon wavevector in the case of GaAs, as described in Vasconcellos & Luzzi7171 Vasconcellos AR and Luzzi R. Time-relaxation approach in far from equilibrium semiconductor plasma. Solid State Communications. 1982; 44(7):1019-1024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(82)90326-X.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(82)9...
. For these same three modes, it can be shown that the rate of energy transfer from the "hot" carriers to the LO phonons shows a rapid energy transfer in the first few picoseconds, followed by a slower one when a near thermalization of carriers and LO phonons occurs in, roughly, twenty to thirty picoseconds as can be concluded from Figure 7. Comparison with experimental results is hindered by the fact that the latter are scarce as a result of the difficulties to perform Raman scattering experiments (which provide the values of ν(q) with a time resolution in the subpicosecond time scale).

Figure 7
Evolution of the quasitemperature of the carriers and three LO-phonon modes, for the conditions indicated in the upper right inset.

We can then conclude that in this second kinetic stage there occurs an internal thermalization of the carrier system, but during the application of the laser pulse, and an interval thereafter, no contraction of description of the optical phonon subsystem can be introduced, and its macroscopic state should be described by the whole set of population distribution functions νη(q).

2.4 Third kinetic stage

Inspection of Figure 7 tells us that near-internal-thermalization of all the optical modes occurs in, roughly, the tens of picoseconds scale after the end of the laser pulse. The internal thermalization of the optical phonon system is then a result of the mutual thermalization of all the optical phonon modes with the carrier subsystem. At this point, a further contraction of the optical phonon system can be introduced, with its macroscopic state characterized by unique quasitemperatures TLO*(t) and TTO*(t), with the phonon populations given by the distributions

νLO(TO)(q)=1eωLO(TO)(q)/kBTLO(TO)(t)1 , (5)

attaining a form resembling a time-dependent Planck distribution.

We then have a macroscopic description of the nonequilibrium HEPS in terms of the six macrovariables Tc*(t), TLO*(t), TTO*(t), TAC*(t), μe*(t) and μh*(t). (As already noted, in the usual experimental conditions a very small departure from equilibrium of the acoustic AC phonons is expected). Figure 8 shows the evolution of the carrier quasi-temperature under the conditions of the experiment of Seymour et al.7272 Seymour RJ, Junnarkar MR and Alfano RR. Slowed picosecond kinetics of hot photogenerated carriers in GaAs. Solid State Communications. 1982; 41(9):657-660. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(82)90725-6.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(82)9...
, calculated solving the equations for νq coupled to that of Tc*(t), μe*(t) and μh*(t) (Figure 8b), and the results of another calculation using unique optical-phonon quasi-temperatures TLO*(t) and TTO*(t) (Figure 8a) from the outset7070 Algarte AC. Cooling of hot carriers in highly photoexcited semiconductors. Physical Review B: Condensed Matter and Materials Physics. 1988; 38(3):2162-2165. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.38.2162.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.38.21...
. Figure 8b agrees quite well with the experimental data, as shown later on in Figure 9. Figure 8clearly shows the large discrepancy between the curves obtained using the complete contraction of the phonon system, i.e. when using the third stage in place of the second. This is a result of the fact that the use of unique quasi-temperatures for LO and TO phonons overestimates the energy transfer from the carrier system. The selective transfer of energy to the phonon modes (small at low and high wavevector modes and large in a restricted off-center region of the Brillouin zone) produces a much slower cooling down of the carriers. Thus, the third kinetic stage in HEPS, characterized by the internal thermalization of optical phonons, follows at a time τ3 of, roughly, ten to twenty picoseconds after the end of the exciting laser pulse. This value of τ3 is expected to be quite similar for most direct-gap polar semiconductors, but may differ in other types of HEPS, each case requiring a calculation like the one described here.

Figure 8
Comparison of the evolution of the carriers' temperature when (a) is taken a unique quasitemperature for the phonons modes, and (b) the one when it is calculated the evolution of the quasitemperature of each phonon mode. As shown in Figure 10 the latter agrees quite well with the experimental data. (Algarte7070 Algarte AC. Cooling of hot carriers in highly photoexcited semiconductors. Physical Review B: Condensed Matter and Materials Physics. 1988; 38(3):2162-2165. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.38.2162.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.38.21...
).
Figure 9
Evolution of the carrier quasitemperature in highly excited GaAs. The NESEF-based calculation (full line) is from Daly & Mahr8181 Daly T and Mahr H. Time-resolved luminescence spectra in highly photo-excited CdSe at 1.8K. Solid State Communications. 1978; 25(5):323-326. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(78)90968-7.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(78)9...
and experimental data (dots) are from Seymour et al.7272 Seymour RJ, Junnarkar MR and Alfano RR. Slowed picosecond kinetics of hot photogenerated carriers in GaAs. Solid State Communications. 1982; 41(9):657-660. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(82)90725-6.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(82)9...
.

The experiments of Leheny et al.7373 Leheny RF, Shah J, Fork RL, Shank CV and Migus A. Dynamics of hot carrier cooling in photo-excited GaAs. Solid State Communications. 1979; 31(11):809-813. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(79)90393-4.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(79)9...
, von der Linde & Lambrich7474 Linde DV and Lambrich R. Direct measurement of hot-electron relaxation by picosecond spectroscopy. Physical Review Letters. 1979; 42:1090. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.42.1090.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.42...
and Seymour et al.7272 Seymour RJ, Junnarkar MR and Alfano RR. Slowed picosecond kinetics of hot photogenerated carriers in GaAs. Solid State Communications. 1982; 41(9):657-660. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(82)90725-6.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(82)9...
provide data that were analyzed in terms of a description of the HEPS in the third kinetic stage (ten or more picoseconds after the end of the exciting laser pulse). Figures 10a, 10b and 10c show a comparison of theoretical (full-lines) and experimental (dots) results displaying very good agreement7575 Sampaio AJ and Luzzi R. Relaxation kinetics in polar semiconductors. Journal of Physics and Chemistry of Solids. 1983; 44(6):479-488. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0022-3697(83)90035-5.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0022-3697(83)9...
. This indicates that the contracted description of the third kinetic stage applies well and thermalization of carriers and optical phonons has been established. In Figure 10cthe dashed curve is a calculation neglecting the anharmonic interaction among phonons. The much better agreement shown by the full curve (including anharmonic interactions) is a clear manifestation of our previous arguments that the transfer of the carrier excess energy to the reservoir is channeled via optical phonons and anharmonic interaction.

Figure 10
Evolution of the carriers' quasitemperature in three different experimental situations (indicated in the main text) which are the full lines calculated in NESEF, compared with experimental data (dots) (Sampaio7575 Sampaio AJ and Luzzi R. Relaxation kinetics in polar semiconductors. Journal of Physics and Chemistry of Solids. 1983; 44(6):479-488. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0022-3697(83)90035-5.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0022-3697(83)9...
).

We recall that the carrier quasitemperature is derived from the slope of the high-frequency side of the luminescence spectrum, I(ω|t)7676 Rodrigues CG, Vasconcellos AR and Luzzi R. Optical properties of III-nitrides in electric fields. The European Physical Journal B. 2009; 72(1):67-75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1140/epjb/e2009-00332-y.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1140/epjb/e2009-003...
. It follows that

|ddωlnI(ω|t)|=kBTc(t) , (6)

(in modulus because the slope is negative) providing what can be called a "thermometric device" for the measurement of the carriers' quasitemperature.

2.5 Relaxation towards final thermodynamic equilibrium

After the third kinetic stage has been set, the coincident quasitemperatures Tc*(t)=TLO*(t)=TTO*(t) keep decreasing at a slow pace towards final thermal equilibrium at the reservoir temperature T0. However, it must be kept in mind that electron-hole recombination is present with a recombination time of the order of nanoseconds. Hence, during relaxation to final equilibrium the concentration of carriers will decrease enough to lead to a Mott-phase transition from the HEPS metallic phase to the excitonic non-metallic phase, with eventual formation of excitonic complexes. At very low temperatures, a Keldysh phase of an exciton gas in coexistence with metallic electron-hole droplets7777 Nozières P. Phase transitions in electron-hole liquids. Physica B, Condensed Matter. 1983; 117:16. may even occur. In Figure 9 is evident the evolution of the carriers' quasitemperature towards a final thermal equilibrium with the reservoirs at 300 K, following in a larger than 100 ps scale after application of the laser pulse. The full line is the calculation in NESEF and the dots are experimental data taken from Seymour et al.7272 Seymour RJ, Junnarkar MR and Alfano RR. Slowed picosecond kinetics of hot photogenerated carriers in GaAs. Solid State Communications. 1982; 41(9):657-660. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(82)90725-6.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(82)9...
. We recall that the carriers' quasitemperature is measured using the value of the angular coefficient, in a logarithmic plot, of the high frequency side of the luminescent spectra (cf. Equation 6)7878 Luzzi R, Vasconcellos AR, Casas-Vazquez J and Jou D. Characterization and measurement of a nonequilibrium temperature-like variable in irreversible thermodynamics. Physica A. 1997; 234(3-4):699-714. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0378-4371(96)00303-2.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0378-4371(96)...
.

Similar situation can be observed in Figure 11 in the case of the experiment of Amand & Collet7979 Amand T and Collet J. Plasma dynamics in GaAs under strong picosecond surface excitation. Journal of Physics and Chemistry of Solids. 1985; 46(9):1053-1059. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0022-3697(85)90019-8.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0022-3697(85)9...
; again the full line is the calculation in NESEF and the dots are experimental data. The dashed curve is a calculation when ambipolar diffusion of electrons and holes out of the active volume of the sample (the region of focusing of the laser beam) is neglected, resulting in a more rapid relaxation, contrary to what is observed; the arrow indicates the end of the exciting laser pulses, which was taken with a rectangular profile. This then evidences the influence in the change of the density in the photoinjected plasma, a change illustrated in Figure 12, (showing the calculation and the experimental data), resulting from radiative recombination and, mainly, the aforementioned ambipolar diffusion8080 Vasconcellos AR, Algarte AC and Luzzi R. Diffusion of photoinjected carriers in plasma in nonequilibrium semiconductors. Physical Review B: Condensed Matter and Materials Physics. 1993; 48(15):10873-10884. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.48.10873.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.48.10...
. It can be noticed that the latter is also responsible for the emergence of the shoulder that can be seen in the plot in Figure 10.

Figure 11
Evolution of the carrier quasitemperature in highly excited GaAs. The NESEF-based calculation (full line) is from Algarte et al.8282 Algarte AC, Vasconcellos AR and Luzzi R. Ultrafast phenomena in the photoinjected plasma in semiconductors. Brazilian Journal of Physics. 1996; 26:543. and experimental data (dots) are from Amand & Collet7979 Amand T and Collet J. Plasma dynamics in GaAs under strong picosecond surface excitation. Journal of Physics and Chemistry of Solids. 1985; 46(9):1053-1059. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0022-3697(85)90019-8.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0022-3697(85)9...
.
Figure 12
Evolution of the photoinjected carrier concentration in the same conditions of Figure 11, governed mainly by ambipolar diffusion. Full line is the NESEF-based calculation and the dots are experimental data from Amand & Collet7979 Amand T and Collet J. Plasma dynamics in GaAs under strong picosecond surface excitation. Journal of Physics and Chemistry of Solids. 1985; 46(9):1053-1059. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0022-3697(85)90019-8.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0022-3697(85)9...
.

Figure 13 provides a summarized picture of the contraction processes in the macroscopic description of the homogeneous HEPS here described. We have illustrated the matter considering experiments involving ultrafast-time resolved luminescence. In Figure 13 it is shown a set of spectra taken at increasing times (resolution is in the order of some nanoseconds) of the luminescence in platelets of CdS[8181 Daly T and Mahr H. Time-resolved luminescence spectra in highly photo-excited CdSe at 1.8K. Solid State Communications. 1978; 25(5):323-326. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(78)90968-7.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(78)9...
]. This is quite illustrative of the evolution of fast irreversible processes, what is evidenced in the observation that, (1) the width of the band decreases in time, while (2) the slope of the spectra in the high frequency side increases, and (3) there is a shift in the position of the peak. This is a result that as the nonequilibrium state of the system evolves in time, the concentration of electron-hole pairs decreases (tending to return to the equilibrium value) and the energy in excess of equilibrium is also returning – via relaxation processes to the lattice – to its value in equilibrium8282 Algarte AC, Vasconcellos AR and Luzzi R. Ultrafast phenomena in the photoinjected plasma in semiconductors. Brazilian Journal of Physics. 1996; 26:543.,8383 Algarte AC, Vasconcellos AR and Luzzi R. Kinetics of hot elementary excitations in photoexcited polar semiconductors. Physica Status Solidi. 1992; 173(2):487-514. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pssb.2221730202.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pssb.222173020...
.

Figure 13
Photoluminescence spectra of CdSe platelets under high levels of excitation, obtained at the indicated delay times after pulse excitation. (Daly8181 Daly T and Mahr H. Time-resolved luminescence spectra in highly photo-excited CdSe at 1.8K. Solid State Communications. 1978; 25(5):323-326. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(78)90968-7.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(78)9...
).

3 Time Resolved Optical Properties in HEPS

It may be noticed that for the study of the ultrafast time evolving optical properties in the plasma in semiconductors it is necessary to derive in detail a response function theory and scattering theory for systems far from equilibrium.

Particularly, one needs to derive the frequency- and wave number-dependent dielectric function in arbitrary nonequilibrium conditions, because it is the quantity which contains all the information related to the optical properties of the system (as known, it provides the absorption coefficient, the reflectivity coefficient, the Raman scattering cross section, etc.). We describe the application of the results to the study of a particular type of experiment, namely the time-resolved reflectivity changes in GaAs and other materials in Albrecht et al.8484 Albrecht W, Kruse T and Kurz H. Time-resolved observation of coherent phonons in superconducting YBa2Cu3O7−δ thin films. Physical Review Letters. 1992; 69(9):1451-1454. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.69.1451. PMid:10047220
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.69...
, Cho et al.8585 Cho GC, Kütt W and Kurz H. Subpicosecond time-resolved coherent-phonon oscillations in GaAs. Physical Review Letters. 1990; 65(6):764-766. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.65.764. PMid:10043013
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.65...
, Pfeifer et al.8686 Pfeifer T, Kütt W, Kurz H and Scholz R. Generation and detection of coherent optical phonons in germanium. Physical Review Letters. 1992; 69(22):3248-3251. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.69.3248. PMid:10046768
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.69...
and Scholz et al.8787 Scholz R, Pfeifer P and Kurz H. Density-matrix theory of coherent phonon oscillations in germanium. Physical Review B: Condensed Matter and Materials Physics. 1993; 47(24):16229-16236. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.47.16229.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.47.16...
where signal changes in the reflectivity,ΔR/R, of the order of 10-7 are detected, and a distinct oscillation of the signal in real time is observed. In Figure 14 are reproduced time-resolved reflectivity spectra, and in the upper right inset is shown the part corresponding to the observed oscillation, as reported by Cho et al.8585 Cho GC, Kütt W and Kurz H. Subpicosecond time-resolved coherent-phonon oscillations in GaAs. Physical Review Letters. 1990; 65(6):764-766. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.65.764. PMid:10043013
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.65...
.

Figure 14
Reproduction of the time-resolved reflectivity changes in GaAs, as reported by Cho et al.8585 Cho GC, Kütt W and Kurz H. Subpicosecond time-resolved coherent-phonon oscillations in GaAs. Physical Review Letters. 1990; 65(6):764-766. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.65.764. PMid:10043013
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.65...
.

Such phenomenon has been attributed to the generation of coherent lattice vibrations, and several theoretical approaches have been reported8787 Scholz R, Pfeifer P and Kurz H. Density-matrix theory of coherent phonon oscillations in germanium. Physical Review B: Condensed Matter and Materials Physics. 1993; 47(24):16229-16236. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.47.16229.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.47.16...

88 Kuznetsov AV and Stanton CJ. Theory of coherent phonon oscillations in semiconductors. Physical Review Letters. 1994; 73(24):3243-3246. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.73.3243. PMid:10057327
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.73...

89 Mazin II, Liechtenstein AI, Jepsen O, Andersen OK and Rodriguez CO. Displacive excitation of coherent phonons in YBa 2 Cu 3 O 7. Physical Review B: Condensed Matter and Materials Physics. 1994; 49(13):9210-9213. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.49.9210.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.49.92...
-9090 Zeiger HJ, Vidal J, Cheng TK, Ippen EP, Dresselhaus G and Dresselhaus MS. Theory for displacive excitation of coherent phonons. Physical Review B: Condensed Matter and Materials Physics. 1992; 45(2):768-778. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.45.768.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.45.76...
. A clear description, on phenomenological bases, which captures the essential physics of the problem, is reported in Zeiger et al.9090 Zeiger HJ, Vidal J, Cheng TK, Ippen EP, Dresselhaus G and Dresselhaus MS. Theory for displacive excitation of coherent phonons. Physical Review B: Condensed Matter and Materials Physics. 1992; 45(2):768-778. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.45.768.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.45.76...
, and in Vasconcellos et al.9191 Vasconcellos AR, Luzzi R and Madureira JR. Optical properties of semiconductors via pump-probe experiments: statistical-thermodynamical approach, hot plasma and coherent phonon states. Journal of Physics Condensed Matter. 2000; 12(24):5325-5342. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0953-8984/12/24/321.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0953-8984/12/2...
is presented an analysis based on NESEF, where it is evidenced that the oscillatory effect is provided by the displacive excitation of the polar lattice vibrations, arising out of the coupling of the carrier-charge density and polar modes, and its decay is mainly governed by the cooling down of the carriers, and where the different physical aspects of the problem are discussed. We briefly describe next the full use of NESEF for dealing with pump-probe experiments for studying the optical properties of semiconductors in nonequilibrium conditions.

Let us consider a direct-gap polar semiconductor in a pump-probe experiment. We recall that the exciting intense laser pulse produces the so-called highly excited plasma in semiconductors HEPS (see Figure 2), namely, electron-hole pairs in the metallic side of Mott transition (that is, they are itinerant carriers, and we recall that this requires concentrations of these photoinjected quasi-particles of order of 1016cm-3 and up), which compose a two-component Fermi fluid, moving in the lattice background. It constitutes a highly nonequilibrated system where the photoexcited carriers rapidly redistribute their energy in excess of equilibrium via, mainly, the strong long-range Coulomb interaction (pico- to subpico- second scale), followed by the transfer of energy to the phonon field (predominantly to the optical phonons, and preferentially to the LO phonons via Fröhlich interaction), and finally via acoustic phonons to the external thermal reservoir, as we have already described. Along the process the carrier density diminishes in recombination processes (nanosecond time scale) and through ambipolar diffusion out of the active volume of the sample (ten-fold picosecond time scale).

Moreover, a probe interacting weakly with the HEPS is used to obtain an optical response, the reflectivity of the incoming laser photons with frequency ω and wavevector Q in the case under consideration. From the theoretical point of view, such measurement is to be analyzed in terms of the all important and inevitable use of correlation functions in response function theory5252 Zubarev DN. Double-time Green functions in statistical physics. Uspekhi Fiziologicheskikh Nauk. 1960; 71(5):71-116. http://dx.doi.org/10.3367/UFNr.0071.196005c.0071.
http://dx.doi.org/10.3367/UFNr.0071.1960...
,5353 Zubarev DN. Double-time green functions in statistical physics. Soviet Physics - Uspekhi. 1960; 3(3):320-345. http://dx.doi.org/10.1070/PU1960v003n03ABEH003275.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1070/PU1960v003n03A...
,9292 Martin PC. Measurements and correlation functions. In: Witt C and Balian R. Many-body physics. New York: Gordon and Breach; 1968. p. 37-136.. The usual application in normal probe experiments performed on a system initially in equilibrium had a long history of success, and a practical and elegant treatment is based on the method of the double-time (equilibrium) thermodynamic Green functions5252 Zubarev DN. Double-time Green functions in statistical physics. Uspekhi Fiziologicheskikh Nauk. 1960; 71(5):71-116. http://dx.doi.org/10.3367/UFNr.0071.196005c.0071.
http://dx.doi.org/10.3367/UFNr.0071.1960...
,5353 Zubarev DN. Double-time green functions in statistical physics. Soviet Physics - Uspekhi. 1960; 3(3):320-345. http://dx.doi.org/10.1070/PU1960v003n03ABEH003275.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1070/PU1960v003n03A...
. In the present case of a pump-probe experiment we need to resort to a theory of such type but applied to a system whose macroscopic state is in nonequilibrium conditions and evolving in time as a result of the pumping dissipative processes that are developing while the sample is probed, that is, the response function theory for nonequilibrium systems, which needs be coupled to the kinetic theory that describes the evolution of the nonequilibrium state of the system1818 Luzzi R, Vasconcellos AR and Ramos JG. Predictive statistical mechanics: a nonequilibrium statistical ensemble formalism. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic; 2002.,1919 Luzzi R, Vasconcellos AR and Ramos JG. The theory of irreversible processes: foundations of a non-equilibrium statistical ensemble formalism. Rivista del Nuovo Cimento. 2006; 29:1.,9393 Luzzi R and Vasconcellos AR. Response function theory for far-from-equilibrium statistical systems. Journal of Statistical Physics. 1980; 23(5):539-559. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF01011729.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF01011729...
,9494 Lauck L, Vasconcellos AR and Luzzi R. A nonlinear quantum transport theory. Physica A. 1990; 168(2):789-819. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0378-4371(90)90031-M.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0378-4371(90)9...
. We resort here to such theory for the study of the optical properties in HEPS, and, in particular, we consider the case of reflectivity.

The time-dependent (because it keeps changing along with the evolution of the macrostate of the nonequilibrated system) R(ω,Q|t) is related to the index of refraction η(ω,Q|t)+iκ(ω,Q|t) through the well-known expression

R(ω,Q|t)=[η(ω,Q|t)1]2+[κ(ω,Q|t)]2[η(ω,Q|t)+1]2+[κ(ω,Q|t)]2 , (7)

and the refraction index is related to the time-evolving frequency- and wavevector-dependent dielectric function by

ϵ(ω,Q|t)=ϵ(ω,Q|t)+iϵ(ω,Q|t)=[η(ω,Q|t)+iκ(ω,Q|t)]2, (8)

where η and ϵ, and κ and ϵ, are the real and imaginary parts of the refraction index and of the dielectric function.

We call the attention to the fact that the dielectric function depends on the frequency and the wavevector of the radiation involved, and t stands for the time when a measurement is performed. Once again we stress that this dependence on time is, of course, the result that the macroscopic state of the non-equilibrated plasma is evolving in time as the experiment is performed.

Therefore it is our task to calculate this dielectric function in the nonequilibrium state of the HEPS. First, we note that according to Maxwell equations in material media (that is, Maxwell equations now averaged over the nonequilibrium statistical ensemble) we have that

ϵ1(ω,Q|t)1=n(ω,Q|t)r(ω,Q) , (9)

where r(ω,Q) is the amplitude of a probe charge density with frequency ω and wavevector Q, and n(ω,Q|t) the induced polarization-charge density of carriers and lattice in the media. The latter can be calculated resorting to the response function theory for systems far from equilibrium (the case is quite similar to the calculation of the time-resolved Raman scattering cross section9595 Vasconcellos AR and Luzzi R. Plasmon-phonon coupling effects in picosecond Raman scattering of nonequilibrium semiconductor plasma. J. Raman Spectrosc. 1983; 14(1):39-44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jrs.1250140111.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jrs.1250140111...
, and obtained in terms of the nonequilibrium-thermodynamic Green functions, as we proceed to describe.

Using the formalism described in Vasconcellos et al.9191 Vasconcellos AR, Luzzi R and Madureira JR. Optical properties of semiconductors via pump-probe experiments: statistical-thermodynamical approach, hot plasma and coherent phonon states. Journal of Physics Condensed Matter. 2000; 12(24):5325-5342. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0953-8984/12/24/321.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0953-8984/12/2...
to obtain ϵ(ω,Q|t), it follows that,

ϵ1(ω,Q)1=V(Q)[Gcc(ω,Q)+Gci(ω,Q)+Gic(ω,Q)+Gii(ω,Q)] , (10)

giving the reciprocal of the dielectric function in terms of Green functions given by

Gcc(ω,Q)=n^c(Q);n^c(Q)|ω;t, (11)
Gci(ω,Q)=n^c(Q);n^i(Q)|ω;t , (12)
Gic(ω,Q)=n^i(Q);n^c(Q)|ω;t , (13)
Gii(ω,Q)=n^i(Q);n^i(Q)|ω;t , (14)

where V(Q)=4πne2/Vε0Q2 is the matrix element of the Coulomb potential in plane-wave states and n^c(Q), and n^i(Q), refer to the Q-wave vector Fourier transform of the operators for the densities of charge of carriers and ions respectively.

But, the expression we obtain is, as already noticed, depending on the evolving nonequilibrium macroscopic state of the system, a fact embedded in the expressions for the time-dependent distribution functions of the carrier and phonon states. Therefore, they are to be derived within the kinetic theory in NESEF, and the first and fundamental step is the choice of the set of variables deemed appropriate for the description of the macroscopic state of the system. The case of HEPS has already been discussed, and we simply recall that a first set of variables needs be the one composed of the carriers' density and energy, and the phonon population functions, together with the set of associated nonequilibrium thermodynamic variables that, as we have seen, can be interpreted as a reciprocal quasitemperature and quasi-chemical potentials of carriers, and reciprocal quasitemperatures of phonons, one for each mode. But in the situation we are considering we need to add, on the basis of the information provided by the experiment, the amplitudes of the LO-lattice vibrations and the carrier charge density; the former because it is clearly present in the experimental data (the oscillation in the reflectivity) and the latter because of the LO-phonon-plasma coupling (clearly present in Raman scattering experiments9595 Vasconcellos AR and Luzzi R. Plasmon-phonon coupling effects in picosecond Raman scattering of nonequilibrium semiconductor plasma. J. Raman Spectrosc. 1983; 14(1):39-44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jrs.1250140111.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jrs.1250140111...

96 Mooradian A and MacWhorter AL. Light scattering from plasmons and phonons in GaAs. In: Wright GB, editor. Light scattering spectra of solids. New York: Springer; 1969. p. 297-308.

97 Mooradian A. Light scattering from single-particle electron and hole excitations in solids. In: Wright GB, editor. Light scattering spectra of solids. New York: Springer; 1969. p. 285-295.

98 Vasconcellos AR, Luzzi R and Esperidião AS. Damped plasma waves in photoexcited plasma in semiconductors. Physical Review B: Condensed Matter and Materials Physics. 1995; 52(7):5021-5029. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.52.5021.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.52.50...
-9999 Wolff P. Light scattering from solid state plasma. In: Wright GB, editor. Light scattering spectra of solids. New York: Springer; 1969. p. 273-284.). Consequently the chosen basic set of dynamical quantities is

{H^c,N^e,N^h,n^kpe,n^kph,ν^q,aq,aq,HB} , (15)

where

H^c=k[εkeckck+εkhhkhk] , (16)
ν^q=aqaq , (17)
N^e=kckck,n^Nh=khkhk , (18)
n^kpe=ck+pck,n^kph=hkphk , (19)

with c (c), h (h), and a (a) being as usual annihilation (creation) operators in electron, hole, and LO-phonon states respectively (k, p, q run over the Brillouin zone). Moreover, the effective mass approximation is used and Coulomb interaction is dealt with in the random phase approximation, and then ϵke=EG+2|k|2/2me* and ϵkh=2|k|2/2mh*. Finally HB is the Hamiltonian of the lattice vibrations different from the LO one. We write for the NESEF-nonequilibrium thermodynamic variables associated to the quantities of Equation 15

{βc(t),βc*(t)μe*(t),βc*(t)μh*(t),Fkpe(t),Fkph(t),ωqβq*(t),φq(t),φq(t),β0} , (20)

respectively, where μe* and μh* are the quasi-chemical potentials for electrons and for holes; we write βc*(t)=1/kBTc(t) introducing the carriers' quasitemperature Tc; βq*(t)=1/kBTq(t) introducing the LO-phonon quasitemperature per mode (ωq is the dispersion relation)5454 Luzzi R, Vasconcellos AR, Casas-Vazquez J and Jou D. Thermodynamic variables in the context of a nonequilibrium statistical ensemble approach. The Journal of Chemical Physics. 1997; 107(18):7383. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.474976.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.474976...
,7272 Seymour RJ, Junnarkar MR and Alfano RR. Slowed picosecond kinetics of hot photogenerated carriers in GaAs. Solid State Communications. 1982; 41(9):657-660. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(82)90725-6.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0038-1098(82)9...
,7878 Luzzi R, Vasconcellos AR, Casas-Vazquez J and Jou D. Characterization and measurement of a nonequilibrium temperature-like variable in irreversible thermodynamics. Physica A. 1997; 234(3-4):699-714. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0378-4371(96)00303-2.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0378-4371(96)...
, β0=1/kBT0 with T0 being the temperature of the thermal reservoir. We indicate the corresponding macrovariables, that is, those which define the nonequilibrium thermodynamic space as

{Ec(t),n(t),n(t),nkpe(t),nkph(t),νq(t),aq|t,aq|t=aq|t,EB} , (21)

which are the statistical average of the quantities of Equation 15, that is

Ec(t)=Tr{H^cϱϵ(t)×ϱR} , (22)
n(t)=Tr{N^e(h)ϱϵ(t)×ϱR} , (23)

and so on, where ϱR is the stationary statistical distribution of the reservoir and n(t) is the carrier density, which is equal for electrons and for holes since they are produced in pairs in the intrinsic semiconductor. The volume of the active region of the sample (where the laser beam is focused) is taken equal to 1 for simplicity.

Next step is to derive the equation of evolution for the basic variables that characterize the nonequilibrium macroscopic state of the system, and from them the evolution of the nonequilibrium thermodynamic variables. This is done according to the NESEF generalized nonlinear quantum transport theory, but in the second-order approximation in relaxation theory. This is an approximation which retains only two-body collisions but with memory and vertex renormalization being neglected, consisting in the Markovian limit of the theory. It is sometimes referred to as the quasi-linear approximation in relaxation theory100100 Kalashnikov P. Equations of motion, Green's functions, and thermodynamic relations in theories of linear relaxation with various sets of macroscopic variables. Theoretical and Mathematical Physics. 1978; 35(1):362-370. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF01032435.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF01032435...
, a name we avoid because of the misleading word linear which refers to the lowest order in dissipation, however the equations are highly nonlinear.

The NESEF auxiliary ("instantaneously frozen") statistical operator is in the present case given, in terms of the variables of Equation 15and nonequilibrium thermodynamic variables of Equation 20, by

ϱ ¯ ( t ,0 ) = exp { ϕ ( t ) β c ( t ) [ H ^ c μ e ( t ) N ^ e μ h ( t ) N ^ h ] k p [ F k p e ( t ) n ^ k p e ( t ) + F k p h ( t ) n ^ k p h ( t ) ] k p [ β q ( t ) ω q ν ^ q + φ q ( t ) a q + φ q ( t ) a q ] β 0 H B } (24)

where ϕ(t) ensures the normalization of ϱ¯(t,0). Moreover, we recall, the statistical operator ϱε(t) is given by

ϱε(t)=ϱ¯(t,0)+ϱε(t)=exp{S^(t,0)+tdteε(tt)ddtS^(t,tt)} , (25)

where

S^(t,0)=lnϱ¯(t,0) , (26)
S^(t,tt)=exp{1i(tt)H^}S^(t,0)exp{1i(tt)H^} , (27)

with S^(t,0) being the so-called informational-statistical entropy operator, and H^ stands as usual for the system Hamiltonian (which includes the interaction with the external sources and with the thermal reservoir). Moreover, and for the sake of completeness, we recall that in Equation 25 ε is a positive infinitesimal that goes to zero after the calculation of averages: This procedure introduces Bogoliubov's quasiaverage method which in this case breaks the time-reversal symmetry of Liouville equation introducing irreversible behavior from the onset1818 Luzzi R, Vasconcellos AR and Ramos JG. Predictive statistical mechanics: a nonequilibrium statistical ensemble formalism. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic; 2002.,1919 Luzzi R, Vasconcellos AR and Ramos JG. The theory of irreversible processes: foundations of a non-equilibrium statistical ensemble formalism. Rivista del Nuovo Cimento. 2006; 29:1.,101101 Zubarev DN. Nonequilibrium statistical thermodynamics. New York: Plenum-Consultants Bureau; 1974).

102 Zubarev DN. The method of the non-equilibrium statistical operator and its applications. I. Fortschritte der Physik. 1970; 18:125. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/prop.19700180302.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/prop.197001803...

103 Zubarev DN. Modern methods of the statistical theory of nonequilibrium processes. Journal of Soviet Mathematics. 1981; 16(6):1509-1571. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF01091712.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF01091712...

104 Zubarev DN, Morozov V and Röpke G. Statistical mechanics of nonequilibrium processes. Berlin: Akademie-Wiley VCH; 1996. v. 1.

105 Zubarev DN, Morozov V and Röpke G. Statistical mechanics of nonequilibrium processes. Berlin: Akademie-Wiley VCH; 1997. v. 2.
-106106 Akhiezer AI and Peletminskii SV. Methods of statistical physics. Oxford: Pergamon; 1981..

Using the statistical operator of Equation 25the Green functions that define the dielectric function [cf. Equation 10 can be calculated. This is an arduous task, and in the process it is necessary to evaluate the occupation functions

fk(t)=Tr{ckckϱε(t)}, (28)

which for weak inhomogeneities, as it is the present case, is presented in Vasconcellos et al.9191 Vasconcellos AR, Luzzi R and Madureira JR. Optical properties of semiconductors via pump-probe experiments: statistical-thermodynamical approach, hot plasma and coherent phonon states. Journal of Physics Condensed Matter. 2000; 12(24):5325-5342. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0953-8984/12/24/321.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0953-8984/12/2...
. The (nonequilibrium) carrier quasitemperature Tc* is obtained, and its evolution in time shown in Figure 15.

Figure 15
Evolution of the carrier's quasitemperature, calculated in the conditions of the experiment in the caption to Figure 14(Vasconcellos9191 Vasconcellos AR, Luzzi R and Madureira JR. Optical properties of semiconductors via pump-probe experiments: statistical-thermodynamical approach, hot plasma and coherent phonon states. Journal of Physics Condensed Matter. 2000; 12(24):5325-5342. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0953-8984/12/24/321.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0953-8984/12/2...
).

Finally, in Figure 16, leaving only as an adjustable parameter the amplitude – which is fixed fitting the first maximum –, is shown the calculated modulation effect which is compared with the experimental result (we have only placed the positions of maximum and minimum amplitude taken from the experimental data, which are indicated by the full squares).

Figure 16
The theoretically evaluated modulation of the time-resolved reflectivity in the conditions of Cho et al.8585 Cho GC, Kütt W and Kurz H. Subpicosecond time-resolved coherent-phonon oscillations in GaAs. Physical Review Letters. 1990; 65(6):764-766. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.65.764. PMid:10043013
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.65...
, compared with the experimental data. For simplicity we have drawn only the positions of the maxima and minima of the figure in the inset of Figure 14(Vasconcellos9191 Vasconcellos AR, Luzzi R and Madureira JR. Optical properties of semiconductors via pump-probe experiments: statistical-thermodynamical approach, hot plasma and coherent phonon states. Journal of Physics Condensed Matter. 2000; 12(24):5325-5342. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0953-8984/12/24/321.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0953-8984/12/2...
).

In that way this demonstrates the reason of the presence of the observed modulating phenomenon in the reflectivity spectra, occurring with the frequency of the near zone center LO-phonon (more precisely the one of the upper L+ hybrid mode9696 Mooradian A and MacWhorter AL. Light scattering from plasmons and phonons in GaAs. In: Wright GB, editor. Light scattering spectra of solids. New York: Springer; 1969. p. 297-308. with wave vector Q, the one of the photon in the laser radiation field. The amplitude of the modulation is determined by the amplitude of the laser-radiation-driven carrier charge density which is coupled to the optical vibration, and then an open parameter in the theory to be fixed by the experimental observation. This study has provided, as shown, a good illustration of the full use of the formalism of NESEF, with an application to a quite interesting experiment and where, we recall, the observed signal associated to the modulation is seven orders of magnitude smaller than the main signal on which is superimposed.

4 Concluding Remarks

As already noticed, nowadays advanced electronic and opto-electronic semiconductor devices work in far-from-equilibrium conditions, involving ultrafast relaxation processes (in the pico- and femto-second scales) and ultrashort (nanometric) scales (constrained geometries). We have presented here a detailed analysis of the physics involved in the evolution of ultrafast relaxation processes in polar semiconductors. This was done in the framework of the Non-Equilibrium Statistical Ensemble Formalism which allows for the proper description of the ultrafast evolution of the macroscopic non-equilibrium thermodynamic state of the system.

The theory was applied to the analysis of several experiments in the field of ultrafast laser spectroscopy. In a future article we shall present the use of NESEF for dealing with transport properties of polar semiconductors in the presence of moderate to high electric fields, and also the possibility of emergence of complex behavior.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to acknowledge partial financial support received from the São Paulo State Research Agency (FAPESP) and the Brazilian National Research Council (CNPq): The authors are CNPq Research Fellows. The author CGR thanks the financial support received from Goiás State Research Agency (FAPEG).

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    May-Jun 2015

History

  • Received
    14 May 2014
  • Reviewed
    09 Mar 2015
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