ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Strain engineering is a powerful tool for tuning physical properties of 2D materials, including monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMD) -- direct bandgap semiconductors with strong excitonic response. Here, we demonstrate an approach for local characterization of strain-induced modification of excitonic photoluminescence in TMD-based materials. We reversibly stress a monolayer of MoSe$_2$ with an AFM tip and perform spatio-spectral mapping of the excitonic photoluminescence in the vicinity of the indentation point. To fully reproduce the experimental data, we introduce the linear dependence of the exciton energy and corresponding photoluminescence intensity on the induced strain. Careful account for the optical resolution allows extracting these quantities with good agreement with the previous measurements, which involved macroscopic sample deformation. Our approach is a powerful tool for the study of local optomechanical properties of 2D direct bandgap semiconductors with strong excitonic response.
The semiconductor-metal junction is one of the most critical factors for high performance electronic devices. In two-dimensional (2D) semiconductor devices, minimizing the voltage drop at this junction is particularly challenging and important. Despi
The ability to control the size of the electronic bandgap is an integral part of solid-state technology. Atomically-thin two-dimensional crystals offer a new approach for tuning the energies of the electronic states based on the interplay between the
We propose a new 2D semiconductor material (TTA-2D) based on the molecular structure of Thiophene-Tetrathia-Annulene (TTA). The TTA-2D structural, electronic, and optical properties were investigated using textit{ab initio} methods. Our results show
We report on transport measurement study of top-gated field effect transistors made out of InSb nanowires grown by chemical vapor deposition. The transistors exhibit ambipolar transport characteristics revealed by three distinguished gate-voltage reg
In recent years the physics of two-dimensional semiconductors was revived by the discovery of the class of transition metal dichalcogenides. In these systems excitons dominate the optical response in the visible range and open many perspectives for n