Many promising optoelectronic
devices, such as broadband photodetectors,
nonlinear frequency converters, and building blocks for data communication
systems, exploit photoexcited charge carriers in graphene. For these
systems, it is essential to understand the relaxation dynamics after
photoexcitation. These dynamics contain a sub-100 fs thermalization
phase, which occurs through carrier–carrier scattering and
leads to a carrier distribution with an elevated temperature. This
is followed by a picosecond cooling phase, where different phonon
systems play a role: graphene acoustic and optical phonons, and substrate
phonons. Here, we address the cooling pathway of two technologically
relevant systems, both consisting of high-quality graphene with a
mobility >10 000 cm
2
V
–1
s
–1
and environments that do not efficiently take up
electronic heat from graphene: WSe
2
-encapsulated graphene
and suspended graphene. We study the cooling dynamics using ultrafast
pump–probe spectroscopy at room temperature. Cooling
via
disorder-assisted acoustic phonon scattering and out-of-plane
heat transfer to substrate phonons is relatively inefficient in these
systems, suggesting a cooling time of tens of picoseconds. However,
we observe much faster cooling, on a time scale of a few picoseconds.
We attribute this to an intrinsic cooling mechanism, where carriers
in the high-energy tail of the hot-carrier distribution emit optical
phonons. This creates a permanent heat sink, as carriers efficiently
rethermalize. We develop a macroscopic model that explains the observed
dynamics, where cooling is eventually limited by optical-to-acoustic
phonon coupling. These fundamental insights will guide the development
of graphene-based optoelectronic devices.
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