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The semiconducting single-layer transition metal dichalcogenides have been identified as ideal materials for accessing and manipulating spin- and valley-quantum numbers due to a set of favorable optical selection rules in these materials. Here, we apply time- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy to directly probe optically excited free carriers in the electronic band structure of a high quality single layer of WS$_2$. We observe that the optically generated free hole density in a single valley can be increased by a factor of 2 using a circularly polarized optical excitation. Moreover, we find that by varying the photon energy of the excitation we can tune the free carrier density in a given spin-split state around the valence band maximum of the material. The control of the photon energy and polarization of the excitation thus permits us to selectively excite free electron-hole pairs with a given spin and within a single valley.
We employ time- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy to study the spin- and valley-selective photoexcitation and dynamics of free carriers at the K and K points in singly-oriented single layer WS$_2$/Au(111). Our results reveal that in the v
We report on nanosecond long, gate-dependent valley lifetimes of free charge carriers in monolayer WSe$_2$, unambiguously identified by the combination of time-resolved Kerr rotation and electrical transport measurements. While the valley polarizatio
Manipulation of spin and valley degrees of freedom is a key step towards realizing novel quantum technologies, for which atomically thin transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) have been established as promising candidates. In monolayer TMDCs, the l
In monolayer Transition Metal Dichalcogenides (TMDs) the valence and conduction bands are spin split because of the strong spin-orbit interaction. In tungsten-based TMDs the spin-ordering of the conduction band is such that the so-called dark exciton
The spin structure of the valence and conduction bands at the $overline{text{K}}$ and $overline{text{K}}$ valleys of single-layer WS$_2$ on Au(111) is determined by spin- and angle-resolved photoemission and inverse photoemission. The bands confining