RMIT University
Browse

Ferroelectric-Driven Exciton And Trion Modulation In Monolayer Molybdenum And Tungsten Diselenides

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 00:00 authored by Bo Wen, Yi Zhu, Didit Yudistira, Andreas Boes, Linglong Zhang, Tanju Yidirim, Boqing Liu, Han Yan, Xueqian Sun, Yu Zhou, Yunzhou Xue, Yupeng Zhang, Lan Fu, Arnan MitchellArnan Mitchell, Han Zhang, Yuerui Lu
In this work, we show how domain engineered lithium niobate can be used to selectively dope monolayer molybdenum selenide (MoSe2) and tungsten selenide (WSe2) and demonstrate that these ferroelectric domains can significantly enhance or inhibit photoluminescence (PL), with the most dramatic modulation occurring at the heterojunction interface between two domains. A micro-PL and Raman system is used to obtain spatially resolved images of the differently doped transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs). The domain inverted lithium niobate causes changes in the TMDs due to electrostatic doping as a result of the remnant polarization from the substrate. Moreover, the differently doped TMDs (n-type MoSe2 and p-type WSe2) exhibit opposite PL modulation. Distinct oppositely charged domains were obtained with a 9-fold PL enhancement for the same single MoSe2 sheet when adhered to the positive (P+) and negative (P-) domains. This sharp PL modulation on the ferroelectric domain results from different free electron or hole concentrations in the material's conduction band or valence band. Moreover, excitons dissociate rapidly at the interface between the P+ and P- domains due to the built-in electric field. We are able to adjust the charge on the P+ and P- domains using temperature via the pyroelectric effect and observe rapid PL quenching over a narrow temperature range, illustrating the observed PL modulation is electronic in nature. This observation creates an opportunity to harness the direct bandgap TMD 2D materials as an active optical component for the lithium niobate platform using domain engineering of the lithium niobate substrate to create optically active heterostructures that could be used for photodetectors or even electrically driven optical sources on-chip.

Funding

Radioisotope-powered Parallel Electron Lithography for High-throughput Nano-manufacturing

Australian Research Council

Find out more...

Probing and harnessing the light-matter interactions in two-dimensional phosphorene

Australian Research Council

Find out more...

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1021/acsnano.8b09800
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 19360851

Journal

Acs Nano

Volume

13

Issue

5

Start page

5335

End page

5343

Total pages

9

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2019 American Chemical Society

Former Identifier

2006093609

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2019-08-22