ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Observation of Fano resonance in photoluminescence of a two-dimensional magnetic semiconductor

99   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Pngfan Gu
 تاريخ النشر 2019
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

Quantum interference gives rise to the asymmetric Fano resonance line shape when the final states of an electronic transition follows within a continuum of states and a discrete state, which has significant applications in optical switching and sensing. The resonant optical phenomena associated with Fano resonance have been observed by absorption spectra, Raman spectra, transmission spectra, etc., but have rarely been reported in photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy. In this work, we performed spectroscopic studies on layered chromium thiophosphate (CrPS4), a promising ternary antiferromagnetic semiconductor with PL in near-infrared wavelength region and observed Fano resonance when CrPS4 experiences phase transition into the antiferromagnetic state below Neel temperature (38 K). The photoluminescence of the continuum states results from the d band transitions localized at Cr3+ ions, while the discrete state reaches saturation at high excitation power and can be enhanced by the external magnetic field, suggesting it is formed by an impurity level from extra atomic phosphorus. Our findings provide insights into the electronic transitions of CrPS4 and their connection to its intrinsic magnetic properties.



قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

107 - Zheng Sun , Ke Xu , Chang Liu 2020
Two-dimensional materials are an emerging class of new materials with a wide range of electrical and optical properties and potential applications. Single-layer structures of semiconducting transition metal dichalcogenides are gaining increasing atte ntion for use in field-effect transistors. Here, we report a photoluminescence switching effect based on single-layer WSe2 transistors. Dual gates are used to tune the photoluminescence intensity. In particular, a side-gate is utilized to control the location of ions within a solid polymer electrolyte to form an electric double layer at the interface of electrolyte and WSe2 and induce a vertical electric field. Additionally, a back-gate is used to apply a 2nd vertical electric field. An on-off ratio of the light emission up to 90 was observed under constant pump light intensity. In addition, a blue shift of the photoluminescence line up to 36 meV was observed. We attribute this blue shift to the decrease of exciton binding energy due to the change of nonlinear in-plane dielectric constant and use it to determine the 3rd order off-diagonal susceptibility c{hi}^((3) )=3.50*10^(-19)m2/V2.
Tunable magnetic interactions in high-mobility nonmagnetic semiconductor heterostructures are centrally important to spin-based quantum technologies. Conventionally, this requires incorporation of magnetic impurities within the two-dimensional (2D) e lectron layer of the heterostructures, which is achieved either by doping with ferromagnetic atoms, or by electrostatically printing artificial atoms or quantum dots. Here we report experimental evidence of a third, and intrinsic, source of localized spins in high-mobility GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructures, which are clearly observed in the limit of large setback distance (=80 nm) in modulation doping. Local nonequilibrium transport spectroscopy in these systems reveals existence of multiple spins, which are located in a quasi-regular manner in the 2D Fermi sea, and mutually interact at temperatures below 100 milliKelvin via the Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida (RKKY) indirect exchange. The presence of such a spin-array, whose microscopic origin appears to be disorder-bound, simulates a 2D lattice-Kondo system with gate-tunable energy scales.
556 - Ke Yang , Guangyu Wang , Lu Liu 2021
Two-dimensional (2D) ferromagnets have recently drawn extensive attention, and here we study the electronic structure and magnetic properties of the bulk and monolayer of CrSBr, using first-principles calculations and Monte Carlo simulations. Our res ults show that bulk CrSBr is a magnetic semiconductor and has the easy magnetization b-axis, hard c-axis, and intermediate a-axis. Thus, the experimental triaxial magnetic anisotropy (MA) is well reproduced here, and it is identified to be the joint effects of spin-orbit coupling (SOC) and magnetic dipole-dipole interaction. We find that bulk CrSBr has a strong ferromagnetic (FM) intralayer coupling but a marginal interlayer one. We also study CrSBr monolayer in detail and find that the intralayer FM exchange persists and the shape anisotropy has a more pronounced contribution to the MA. Using the parameters of the FM exchange and the triaxial MA, our Monte Carlo simulations show that CrSBr monolayer has Curie temperature Tc = 175 K. Moreover, we find that a uniaxial tensile (compressive) strain along the a (b) axis would further increase the Tc.
A direct observation of the giant Zeeman splitting of the free excitons in (Ga,Fe)N is reported. The magnetooptical and magnetization data imply the ferromagnetic sign and a reduced magnitude of the effective p-d exchange energy governing the interac tion between Fe^{3+} ions and holes in GaN, N_0 beta^(app) = +0.5 +/- 0.2 eV. This finding corroborates the recent suggestion that the strong p-d hybridization specific to nitrides and oxides leads to significant renormalization of the valence band exchange splitting.
97 - Mao Ye , Songbai Hu , Shanming Ke 2019
Materials with reduced dimensions have been shown to host a wide variety of exotic properties and novel quantum states that often defy textbook wisdom1-5. Ferroelectric polarization and metallicity are well-known examples of mutually exclusive proper ties that cannot coexist in bulk solids because the net electric field in a metal can be fully screened by free electrons6. An atomically thin metallic layer capped by insulating layers has shown decent conductivity at room temperature7. Moreover, a penetrating polarization field can be employed to induce an ion displacement and create an intrinsic polarization in the metallic layer. Here we demonstrate that a ferroelectric metal can be artificially synthesized through imposing a strong polarization field in the form of ferroelectric/unit-cell-thin metal superlattices. In this way the symmetry of an atomically thin conductive layer can be broken and manipulated by a neighboring polar field, thereby forming a two-dimensional (2D) ferroelectric metal. The fabricated of (SrRuO3)1/(BaTiO3)10 superlattices exhibit ferroelectric polarization in an atomically thin layer with metallic conductivity at room temperature. A multipronged investigation combining structural analyses, electrical measurements, and first-principles electronic structure calculations unravels the coexistence of 2D electrical conductivity in the SrRuO3 monolayer accompanied by the electric polarization. Such 2D ferroelectric metal paves a novel way to engineer a quantum multi-state with unusual coexisting properties, such as ferroelectrics, ferromagnetics and metals, manipulated by external fields8,9.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا