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Understanding strongly interacting electrons enables the design of materials, nanostructures and devices. Developing this understanding relies on the ability to tune and control electron-electron interactions by, e.g., confining electrons to atomically thin layers of 2D crystals with reduced screening. The interplay of strong interactions on a hexagonal lattice with two nonequivalent valleys, topological moments, and the Ising-like spin-orbit interaction gives rise to a variety of phases of matter corresponding to valley and spin polarized broken symmetry states. In this work we describe a highly tunable strongly interacting system of electrons laterally confined to monolayer transition metal dichalcogenide MoS$_2$ by metalic gates. We predict the existence of valley and spin polarized broken symmetry states tunable by the parabolic confining potential using exact diagonalization techniques for up to $N=6$ electrons. We find that the ground state is formed by one of two phases, either both spin and valley polarized or valley unpolarised but spin intervalley antiferromagnetic, which compete as a function of electronic shell spacing. This finding can be traced back to the combined effect of Ising-like spin-orbit coupling and weak intervalley exchange interaction. These results provide an explanation for interaction-driven symmetry-breaking effects in valley systems and highlight the important role of electron-electron interactions for designing valleytronic devices.
The optical susceptibility is a local, minimally-invasive and spin-selective probe of the ground state of a two-dimensional electron gas. We apply this probe to a gated monolayer of MoS$_2$. We demonstrate that the electrons are spin polarized. Of th
Valley pseudospin in two-dimensional (2D) transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) allows optical control of spin-valley polarization and intervalley quantum coherence. Defect states in TMDs give rise to new exciton features and theoretically exhibit
With the two-band continuum model, we study the broken inversion and time-reversal symmetry state of electrons with finite-range repulsive interactions in bilayer graphene. With the analytical solution to the mean-field Hamiltonian, we obtain the ele
We observe a low-lying sharp spin mode of three interacting electrons in an array of nanofabricated AlGaAs/GaAs quantum dots by means of resonant inelastic light scattering. The finding is enabled by a suppression of the inhomogeneous contribution to
Valleytronics targets the exploitation of the additional degrees of freedom in materials where the energy of the carriers may assume several equal minimum values (valleys) at non-equivalent points of the reciprocal space. In single layers of transiti