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In conventional light harvesting devices, the absorption of a single photon only excites one electron, which sets the standard limit of power-conversion efficiency, such as the Shockley-Queisser limit. In principle, generating and harnessing multiple carriers per absorbed photon can improve the efficiency and possibly overcome this limit. Here, we report the observation of multiple hot carrier collection in graphene-boron-nitride Moire superlattice structures. A record-high zero-bias photoresponsivity of 0.3 ampere per watt, equivalently, an external quantum efficiency exceeding 50 percent, is achieved utilizing graphene photo-Nernst effect, which demonstrates a collection of at least 5 carriers per absorbed photon. We reveal that this effect arises from the enhanced Nernst coefficient through Lifshtiz transition at low energy Van Hove singularities, which is an emergent phenomenon due to the formation of Moire minibands. Our observation points to a new means for extremely efficient and flexible optoelectronics based on van der Waals heterostructures.
The conversion of light into free electron-hole pairs constitutes the key process in the fields of photodetection and photovoltaics. The efficiency of this process depends on the competition of different relaxation pathways and can be greatly enhance
We theoretically demonstrate that moire phonons at the lowest-energy bands can become chiral. A general symmetry analysis reveals that they originate from stacking configurations leading to an asymmetric interlayer binding energy that breaks the $C_{
In graphene moire superlattices, electronic interactions between layers are mostly hidden as band structures get crowded because of folding, making their interpretation cumbersome. Here, the evolution of the electronic band structure as a function of
Many promising optoelectronic devices, such as broadband photodetectors, nonlinear frequency converters, and building blocks for data communication systems, exploit photoexcited charge carriers in graphene. For these systems, it is essential to under
Strain engineering of graphene takes advantage of one of the most dramatic responses of Dirac electrons enabling their manipulation via strain-induced pseudo-magnetic fields. Numerous theoretically proposed devices, such as resonant cavities and vall