Li, JiajunMuller, MarkusKim, Aaram J.Lauchli, Andreas M.Werner, Philipp2023-06-192023-06-192023-06-192023-05-0910.1103/PhysRevB.107.205115https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/198404WOS:000993596700001Recent advances in ultrafast pump-probe spectroscopy provide access to hidden phases of correlated matter, including light-induced superconducting states. The theoretical understanding of these nonequilibrium phases remains limited, particularly for correlated materials on frustrated lattices. Here we demonstrate that photodoping can induce a new type of chiral superconducting phase in frustrated Mott insulators by forming a condensate of doublons and holons. This metastable phase features a spatially varying order parameter with a 120 degrees phase twist which breaks both time-reversal and inversion symmetry. Under an external electric pulse, the 120 degrees chiral superconducting state can exhibit a second-order supercurrent perpendicular to the field in addition to a first-order parallel response, similar to a nonlinear anomalous Hall effect. Light-induced artificial gauge fields may be used to further stabilize this hidden phase. The presented results demonstrate that the light-induced superconducting state on a triangular lattice is of chiral nature and exhibits distinguishing properties which can be revealed in pump-probe experiments. The general mechanism applies to Mott insulators on various frustrated lattices and is tunable by optical means.Materials Science, MultidisciplinaryPhysics, AppliedPhysics, Condensed MatterMaterials SciencePhysicslight-induced superconductivitymean-field theoryorderrealizationsystemsstatesphaseTwisted chiral superconductivity in photodoped frustrated Mott insulatorstext::journal::journal article::research article