Carrier Trapping by Oxygen Impurities in Molybdenum Diselenide
ORAL
Abstract
Trapping of photo-excited carriers by oxygen impurities is studied with ultrafast pump-probe spectroscopy. In exfoliated multilayer MoSe2, oxygen impurities are intentionally created with Ar+ plasma irradiation and air exposure. After plasma treatment, the signal of transient absorption shows a signature of defect capturing carriers. In CVD grown monolayer MoSe2, oxygen impurities are induced during the growth process and confirmed with X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. For both samples, the observed defect state filling shows a clear saturation at high exciton densities, from which the trapping defect densities are estimated from the transient absorption signal. In CVD grown monolayer MoSe2, the defect density is around 0.5x1012/cm2. In plasma treated exfoliated sample, the trapping defect density increases with plasma irradiation time. First principle calculations with density functional theory reveal that oxygen atoms occupying Mo vacancies create mid-gap defect states, which are responsible for the carrier trapping, while oxygen atoms occupying chalcogen vacancies can remove the mid-gap state.
*National Science Foundation (NASCENT, Grant No. EEC-1160494; CAREER, Grant No. CBET-1351881), Department of Energy (SBIR/STTR, Grant No. DE-SC0013178).
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Presenters
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Amritesh Rai
- Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Texas at Austin