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Emerging Photoluminescence from the Dark-Exciton Phonon Replica in Monolayer WSe2

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 Added by Sufei Shi
 Publication date 2019
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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Tungsten-based monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides host a long-lived dark exciton, an electron-hole pair in a spin-triplet configuration. The long lifetime and unique spin properties of the dark exciton provide exciting opportunities to explore light-matter interactions beyond electric dipole transitions. Here we demonstrate that the coupling of the dark exciton and an optically silent chiral phonon enables the intrinsic photoluminescence of the dark-exciton replica in monolayer WSe2. Gate and magnetic-field dependent PL measurements unveil a circularly-polarized replica peak located below the dark exciton by 21.6 meV, equal to E phonon energy from Se vibrations. First-principles calculations show that the exciton-phonon interaction selectively couples the spin-forbidden dark exciton to the intravalley spin-allowed bright exciton, permitting the simultaneous emission of a chiral phonon and a circularly-polarized photon. Our discovery and understanding of the phonon replica reveals a chirality dictated emission channel of the phonons and photons, unveiling a new route of manipulating valley-spin.



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We experimentally demonstrate time-resolved exciton propagation in a monolayer semiconductor at cryogenic temperatures. Monitoring phonon-assisted recombination of dark states, we find a highly unusual case of exciton diffusion. While at 5 K the diffusivity is intrinsically limited by acoustic phonon scattering, we observe a pronounced decrease of the diffusion coefficient with increasing temperature, far below the activation threshold of higher-energy phonon modes. This behavior corresponds neither to well-known regimes of semiclassical free-particle transport nor to the thermally activated hopping in systems with strong localization. Its origin is discussed in the framework of both microscopic numerical and semi-phenomenological analytical models illustrating the observed characteristics of nonclassical propagation. Challenging the established description of mobile excitons in monolayer semiconductors, these results open up avenues to study quantum transport phenomena for excitonic quasiparticles in atomically-thin van der Waals materials and their heterostructures.
We observe a set of three replica luminescent peaks at ~21.4 meV below the dark exciton, negative and positive dark trions (or exciton-polarons) in monolayer WSe2. The replica redshift energy matches the energy of the zone-center E-mode optical phonons. The phonon replicas exhibit parallel gate dependence and same g-factors as the dark excitonic states, but follow the valley selection rules of the bright excitonic states. While the dark states exhibit out-of-plane transition dipole and valley-independent linearly polarized emission in the in-plane directions, their phonon replicas exhibit in-plane transition dipole and valley-dependent circularly polarized emission in the out-of-plane directions. Our results and symmetry analysis show that the K-valley dark exciton decays into a left-handed chiral phonon and a right-handed photon, whereas the K-valley dark exciton decays into a right-handed chiral phonon and a left-handed photon. Such valley selection rules of chiral phonon replicas can be utilized to identify the valleys of the dark excitonic states and explore their chiral interactions with phonons.
Inversion symmetry breaking and three-fold rotation symmetry grant the valley degree of freedom to the robust exciton in monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs), which can be exploited for valleytronics applications. However, the short lifetime of the exciton significantly constrains the possible applications. In contrast, dark exciton could be long-lived but does not necessarily possess the valley degree of freedom. In this work, we report the identification of the momentum-dark, intervalley exciton in monolayer WSe2 through low-temperature magneto-photoluminescence (PL) spectra. Interestingly, the intervalley exciton is brightened through the emission of a chiral phonon at the corners of the Brillouin zone (K point), and the pseudoangular momentum (PAM) of the phonon is transferred to the emitted photon to preserve the valley information. The chiral phonon energy is determined to be ~ 23 meV, based on the experimentally extracted exchange interaction (~ 7 meV), in excellent agreement with the theoretical expectation of 24.6 meV. The long-lived intervalley exciton with valley degree of freedom adds an exciting quasiparticle for valleytronics, and the coupling between the chiral phonon and intervalley exciton furnishes a venue for valley spin manipulation.
Moire superlattices in van der Waals heterostructures have emerged as a powerful tool for engineering novel quantum phenomena. Here we report the observation of a correlated interlayer exciton insulator in a double-layer heterostructure composed of a WSe2 monolayer and a WS2/WSe2 moire bilayer that are separated by an ultrathin hexagonal boron nitride (hBN). The moire WS2/WSe2 bilayer features a Mott insulator state at hole density p/p0 = 1, where p0 corresponds to one hole per moire lattice site. When electrons are added to the Mott insulator in the WS2/WSe2 moire bilayer and an equal number of holes are injected into the WSe2 monolayer, a new interlayer exciton insulator emerges with the holes in the WSe2 monolayer and the electrons in the doped Mott insulator bound together through interlayer Coulomb interactions. The excitonic insulator is stable up to a critical hole density of ~ 0.5p0 in the WSe2 monolayer, beyond which the system becomes metallic. Our study highlights the opportunities for realizing novel quantum phases in double-layer moire systems due to the interplay between the moire flat band and strong interlayer electron interactions.
A direct band gap, remarkable light-matter coupling as well as strong spin-orbit and Coulomb interaction establish two-dimensional (2D) crystals of transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) as an emerging material class for fundamental studies as well as novel technological concepts. Valley selective optical excitation allows for optoelectronic applications based on the momentum of excitons. In addition to lattice imperfections and disorder, scattering by phonons is a significant mechanism for valley depolarization and decoherence in TMDs at elevated temperatures preventing high-temperature valley polarization required for realistic applications. Thus, a detailed knowledge about strength and nature of the interaction of excitons with phonons is vital. We directly access exciton-phonon coupling in charge tunable single layer MoS2 devices by polarization resolved Raman spectroscopy. We observe a strong defect mediated coupling between the long-range oscillating electric field induced by the longitudinal optical (LO) phonon in the dipolar medium and the exciton. We find that this so-called Frohlich exciton LO-phonon interaction is suppressed by doping. This suppression correlates with a distinct increase of the degree of valley polarization of up to 20 % even at elevated temperatures of 220 K. Our result demonstrates a promising strategy to increase the degree of valley polarization towards room temperature valleytronic applications.
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