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Nonperturbative quasi-classical theory of the nonlinear electrodynamic response of graphene (1608.00877v2)

Published 2 Aug 2016 in cond-mat.mes-hall

Abstract: An electromagnetic response of a single graphene layer to a uniform, arbitrarily strong electric field $E(t)$ is calculated by solving the kinetic Boltzmann equation within the relaxation-time approximation. The theory is valid at low (microwave, terahertz, infrared) frequencies satisfying the condition $\hbar\omega\lesssim 2E_F$, where $E_F$ is the Fermi energy. We investigate the saturable absorption and higher harmonics generation effects, as well as the transmission, reflection and absorption of radiation incident on the graphene layer, as a function of the frequency and power of the incident radiation and of the ratio of the radiative to scattering damping rates. We show that the optical bistability effect, predicted in Phys. Rev. B 90, 125425 (2014) on the basis of a perturbative approach, disappears when the problem is solved exactly. We show that, under the action of a high-power radiation ($\gtrsim 100$ kW/cm$2$) both the reflection and absorption coefficients strongly decrease and the layer becomes transparent.

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