Do you want to publish a course? Click here

Observation of forbidden phonons and dark excitons by resonance Raman scattering in few-layer WS$_2$

172   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 Added by Qinghai Tan
 Publication date 2017
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




Ask ChatGPT about the research

The optical properties of the two-dimensional (2D) crystals are dominated by tightly bound electron-hole pairs (excitons) and lattice vibration modes (phonons). The exciton-phonon interaction is fundamentally important to understand the optical properties of 2D materials and thus help develop emerging 2D crystal based optoelectronic devices. Here, we presented the excitonic resonant Raman scattering (RRS) spectra of few-layer WS$_2$ excited by 11 lasers lines covered all of A, B and C exciton transition energies at different sample temperatures from 4 to 300 K. As a result, we are not only able to probe the forbidden phonon modes unobserved in ordinary Raman scattering, but also can determine the bright and dark state fine structures of 1s A exciton. In particular, we also observed the quantum interference between low-energy discrete phonon and exciton continuum under resonant excitation. Our works pave a way to understand the exciton-phonon coupling and many-body effects in 2D materials.



rate research

Read More

The Raman selection rules arise from the crystal symmetry and then determine the Raman activity and polarization of scattered phonon modes. However, these selection rules can be broken in resonant process due to the strong electron-phonon coupling effect. Here we reported the observation of breakdown of Raman selection rules in few-layer WS$_2$ by using resonant Raman scattering with dark A exciton. In this case, not only the infrared active modes and backscattering forbidden modes are observed, but the intensities of all observed phonon modes become strongest under paralleled-polarization and independent on the Raman tensors of phonons. We attributed this phenomenon to the interaction between dark A exciton and the scatted phonon, the so-called intraband Fr{o}hlich interaction, where the Raman scattering possibility is totally determined by the symmetry of exciton rather than the phonons due to strong electron-phonon coupling. Our results not only can be used to easily detect the optical forbidden excitonic and phononic states but also provide a possible way to manipulate optical transitions between electronic levels.
We study the second-order Raman process of mono- and few-layer MoTe$_2$, by combining {em ab initio} density functional perturbation calculations with experimental Raman spectroscopy using 532, 633 and 785 nm excitation lasers. The calculated electronic band structure and the density of states show that the electron-photon resonance process occurs at the high-symmetry M point in the Brillouin zone, where a strong optical absorption occurs by a logarithmic Van-Hove singularity. Double resonance Raman scattering with inter-valley electron-phonon coupling connects two of the three inequivalent M points in the Brillouin zone, giving rise to second-order Raman peaks due to the M point phonons. The predicted frequencies of the second-order Raman peaks agree with the observed peak positions that cannot be assigned in terms of a first-order process. Our study attempts to supply a basic understanding of the second-order Raman process occurring in transition metal di-chalcogenides (TMDs) and may provide additional information both on the lattice dynamics and optical processes especially for TMDs with small energy band gaps such as MoTe$_2$ or at high laser excitation energy.
Excitons with binding energies of a few hundreds of meV control the optical properties of transition metal dichalcogenide monolayers. Knowledge of the fine structure of these excitons is therefore essential to understand the optoelectronic properties of these 2D materials. Here we measure the exciton fine structure of MoS2 and MoSe2 monolayers encapsulated in boron nitride by magneto-photoluminescence spectroscopy in magnetic fields up to 30 T. The experiments performed in transverse magnetic field reveal a brightening of the spin-forbidden dark excitons in MoS2 monolayer: we find that the dark excitons appear at 14 meV below the bright ones. Measurements performed in tilted magnetic field provide a conceivable description of the neutral exciton fine structure. The experimental results are in agreement with a model taking into account the effect of the exchange interaction on both the bright and dark exciton states as well as the interaction with the magnetic field.
Accurately described excitonic properties of transition metal dichalcogenide heterobilayers (HBLs) are crucial to comprehend the optical response and the charge carrier dynamics of them. Excitons in multilayer systems posses inter or intralayer character whose spectral positions depend on their binding energy and the band alignment of the constituent single-layers. In this study, we report the electronic structure and the absorption spectra of MoS$_2$/WS$_2$ and MoSe$_2$/WSe$_2$ HBLs from first-principles calculations. We explore the spectral positions, binding energies and the origins of inter and intralayer excitons and compare our results with experimental observations. The absorption spectra of the systems are obtained by solving the Bethe-Salpeter equation on top of a G$_0$W$_0$ calculation which corrects the independent particle eigenvalues obtained from density functional theory calculations. Our calculations reveal that the lowest energy exciton in both HBLs possesses interlayer character which is decisive regarding their possible device applications. Due to the spatially separated nature of the charge carriers, the binding energy of inter-layer excitons might be expected to be considerably smaller than that of intra-layer ones. However, according to our calculations the binding energy of lowest energy interlayer excitons is only $sim$ 20% lower due to the weaker screening of the Coulomb interaction between layers of the HBLs. Therefore, it can be deduced that the spectral positions of the interlayer excitons with respect to intralayer ones are mostly determined by the band offset of the constituent single-layers. By comparing oscillator strengths and thermal occupation factors, we show that in luminescence at low temperature, the interlayer exciton peak becomes dominant, while in absorption it is almost invisible.
The dynamics of exciton formation in transition metal dichalcogenides is difficult to measure experimentally, since many momentum-indirect exciton states are not accessible to optical interband spectroscopy. Here, we combine a tuneable pump, high-harmonic probe laser source with a 3D momentum imaging technique to map photoemitted electrons from monolayer WS$_2$. This provides momentum-, energy- and time-resolved access to excited states on an ultrafast timescale. The high temporal resolution of the setup allows us to trace the early-stage exciton dynamics on its intrinsic timescale and observe the formation of a momentum-forbidden dark K$Sigma$ exciton a few tens of femtoseconds after optical excitation. By tuning the excitation energy we manipulate the temporal evolution of the coherent excitonic polarization and observe its influence on the dark exciton formation. The experimental results are in excellent agreement with a fully microscopic theory, resolving the temporal and spectral dynamics of bright and dark excitons in WS$_2$.
comments
Fetching comments Fetching comments
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا