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Shedding light on insulators: How light pulses unfreeze electrons

Shedding light on insulators: How light pulses unfreeze electrons
Control over the NiO electronic correlations achieved with a pump-probe experimental setup in the UV. Credit: Science Advances (2025). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adx5676

Metal oxides are abundant in nature and central to technologies such as photocatalysis and photovoltaics. Yet, many suffer from poor electrical conduction, caused by strong repulsion between electrons in neighboring metal atoms.

Researchers at HZB and partner institutions have shown that can temporarily weaken these repulsive forces, lowering the energy required for electron mobility, and inducing a metal-like behavior. This discovery offers a new way to manipulate with light, with high potential for more efficient light-based devices. The paper is in the journal Science Advances.

In most , electrons behave like cars stuck in traffic: strong repulsive forces prevent them from moving into neighboring sites already occupied by other electrons, effectively freezing them in place. Materials governed by these repulsions (or correlations) conduct electricity poorly and underperform in, e.g. solar energy conversion.

Researchers from HZB and partner institutions have now shown that ultrashort light pulses lasting just a few tens of femtoseconds can temporarily weaken these . For a brief moment, electrons are able to move at a lower energy cost, making the material behave more like a metal. Unlike conventional methods that rely on temperature, pressure, or to alter conduction, this approach uses light to achieve the same effect at ultrashort timescales.

Shedding light on insulators: how light pulses unfreeze electrons
When nickel oxide (NiO) is excited with ultrashort UV light pulses, electron repulsions briefly become weaker, making the insulator behave more like a metal. To capture this effect, the researchers probed the material with multicolored UV pulses and measured their absorption and reflectivity. The results reveal unprecedented control over electron repulsions using light. Credit: Thomas Rossi / HZB

To capture this effect on ultrafast timescales, the HZB team joined forces with several partners. The experiment took place at the LACUS in Lausanne (Switzerland), a center specializing in ultrafast science, while the sample characterization, , and simulations were carried out using HZB infrastructure.

The team focused on nickel oxide (NiO), a charge-transfer insulator with an electronic structure similar to high-temperature superconductors. In NiO, they achieved unprecedented control: the reduction in electron repulsion scales linearly with light intensity, persists for hundreds of picoseconds, and relaxes back to equilibrium at the same pace regardless of excitation density.

Altogether, these properties open exciting new perspectives for more efficient light-based devices, and next-generation technologies combining wide dynamic ranges of operation with ultrafast switching speeds.

More information: Thomas C. Rossi et al, Dynamic control of electron correlations in photodoped charge-transfer insulators, Science Advances (2025).

Journal information: Science Advances

Citation: Shedding light on insulators: How light pulses unfreeze electrons (2025, September 8) retrieved 8 September 2025 from /news/2025-09-insulators-pulses-unfreeze-electrons.html
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