Photoluminescence quenching and spin-orbit coupling in graphene/WSe<sub>2</sub> heterostructure

POSTER

Abstract

Strong spin-orbit coupling (SOC) can be introduced into graphene by putting transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) like WSe2 onto graphene. Due to the proximity effect, graphene can inherit the strong SOC from TMDs. We find the strength of the acquired SOC depends on the stacking order of the heterostructures when we use boron nitride (BN) as the capping layer, i.e., SiO2/graphene/WSe2/BN exhibits a stronger SOC in graphene than SiO2/WSe2/graphene/BN. We utilize photoluminescence (PL) to characterize the interaction between WSe2 and graphene by investigating the PL quenching of monolayer chemical vapor deposition grown WSe2 in these two stacks. We observe much stronger PL quenching in the graphene/WSe2/BN stack than in the WSe2/graphene/BN stack. We attribute the much reduced PL quenching in the latter stack to the increased interlayer distance between graphene and WSe2. Consequently, we see a strong WAL effect in the former stack but a small or vanished WAL in the latter one. Our observations and hypothesis are further supported by first principles calculations, which show a clear difference in the interlayer distance between graphene and WSe2 of these two stacks and therefore the resulting SOC strength.

*DOE BES Award No. DE-FG02-07ER46351 and NSF-ECCS and No. 1610447

Presenters

  • Everardo Molina

    • Univ of California - Riverside
    • Physics, Univ of California - Riverside

Authors

  • Everardo Molina

    • Univ of California - Riverside
    • Physics, Univ of California - Riverside
  • Bowen Yang

    • Univ of California - Riverside
    • Physics, Univ of California - Riverside
  • David Barroso

    • Univ of California - Riverside
  • Jeongwoo Kim

    • Univ of California - Irvine
  • Mark Lohmann

    • Univ of California - Riverside
    • Physics, Univ of California - Riverside
  • Ludwig Bartels

    • Univ of California - Riverside
  • Ruqian Wu

    • Univ of California - Irvine
    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Univ of California - Irvine
    • University of California, Irvine
    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of California, Irvine
    • Physics, Univ of California - Irvine
  • Jing Shi

    • Univ of California - Riverside
    • Physics and Astronomy, University of Calirfornia, Riverside
    • University of California, Riverside
    • Physics, Univ of California - Riverside
    • Physics and Astronomy Department, University of California Riverside