Magnetic Proximity Effects in Transition-Metal Dichalcogenides: Converting Excitons
ORAL
Abstract
The two-dimensional character and reduced screening in monolayer transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) lead to the ubiquitous formation of robust excitons with binding energies orders of magnitude larger than in bulk semiconductors. Focusing on neutral excitons, bound electron-hole pairs, that dominate the optical response in TMDs, it is shown that they can provide fingerprints for magnetic proximity effects in magnetic heterostructures [1]. These proximity effects cannot be described by the widely used single-particle description, but instead reveal the possibility of a conversion between optically inactive and active excitons by rotating the magnetization of the magnetic substrate. With recent breakthroughs in fabricating Mo- and W-based magnetic TMD heterostructures, this emergent optical response can be directly tested experimentally.
[1] B. Scharf, et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 119, 127403 (2017)
[1] B. Scharf, et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 119, 127403 (2017)
*This work was supported by DOE Award No. DE-SC0004890, DFG Grants No. SCHA 1899/2-1, SFB 689 and SFB 1170 ``ToCoTronics'', the UB Center for Computational Research, and the Unity Through Knowledge Fund, Contract No. 22/15.
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Presenters
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Benedikt Scharf
- Universität Würzburg
- Physics, University of Würzburg