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Creators/Authors contains: "Ye, Gaihua"

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  1. Abstract Optical phonon engineering through nonlinear effects has been utilized in ultrafast control of material properties. However, nonlinear optical phonons typically exhibit rapid decay due to strong mode-mode couplings, limiting their effectiveness in temperature or frequency sensitive applications. Here we report the observation of long-lived nonlinear optical phonons through the spontaneous formation of phonon frequency combs in the van der Waals material CrXTe3(X=Ge, Si) using high-resolution Raman scattering. Unlike conventional optical phonons, the highestAgmode in CrGeTe3splits into equidistant, sharp peaks forming a frequency comb that persists for hundreds of oscillations and survives up to 200K. These modes correspond to localized oscillations of Ge2Te6clusters, isolated from Cr hexagons, behaving as independent quantum oscillators. Introducing a cubic nonlinear term to the harmonic oscillator model, we simulate the phonon time evolution and successfully replicate the observed comb structure. Similar frequency comb behavior is observed in CrSiTe3, demonstrating the generalizability of this phenomenon. Our findings demonstrate that Raman scattering effectively probes high-frequency nonlinear phonon modes, offering insight into the generation of long-lived, tunable phonon frequency combs with potential applications in ultrafast material control and phonon-based technologies. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2026
  2. Free, publicly-accessible full text available July 1, 2026
  3. Abstract Realization of large effective phonon magnetic moment in monolayer MoS2has established an important route for exploring intriguing magnetic phenomena in a nonmagnetic material. The sizable coupling between the orbital transition and the circularly polarized phonon results in the large effective phonon magnetic moment. In this work, using magneto-Raman spectroscopy, we investigate substitutional doping of magnetic atoms as a tuning knob of the electronic and phononic properties of MoS2. We show that Fe-doping polarizes the spin of the conduction bands and introduces a localized Fe band underneath the conduction band. As a result, an additional orbital transition between the Mo 4dand Fe 3dstates emerges, producing an orbital-phonon hybridized mode at 283 cm−1. Our magnetic field dependent measurements demonstrate that this new mode carries 2.8 μ B effective phonon magnetic moment, which is comparable to that of the undoped MoS2. Moreover, even though a long-range magnetic order is absent in Fe-doped MoS2, the local magnetic moment of Fe modifies the nature of the spin fluctuation, producing monotonically increasing quasielastic scattering spectral weight as temperature decreases. Our results highlight two-dimensional dilute magnetic semiconductors synthesized by substitutional doping as a promising material platform to manipulate the phonon magnetic moment through orbital-phonon coupling. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available September 19, 2026
  4. Free, publicly-accessible full text available January 29, 2026
  5. The interplay of charge, spin, lattice, and orbital degrees of freedom in correlated materials often leads to rich and exotic properties. Recent studies have brought new perspectives to bosonic collective excitations in correlated materials. For example, inelastic neutron scattering experiments revealed non-trivial band topology for magnons and spin–orbit excitons (SOEs) in a quantum magnet CoTiO3(CTO). Here, we report phonon properties resulting from a combination of strong spin–orbit coupling, large crystal field splitting, and trigonal distortion in CTO. Specifically, the interaction between SOEs and phonons endows chirality to two E g phonon modes and leads to large phonon magnetic moments observed in magneto-Raman spectra. The remarkably strong magneto-phononic effect originates from the hybridization of SOEs and phonons due to their close energy proximity. While chiral phonons have been associated with electronic topology in some materials, our work suggests opportunities may arise by exploring chiral phonons coupled to topological bosons. 
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