Spatiotemporal mapping of photocurrent in 2D materials using diamond quantum sensors

 · Invited

Abstract

Photocurrents are conventionally detected by counting the charge that flows between two contacts, but electrical detection cannot resolve the path that photocurrents travel within a material. Here, we leverage nitrogen-vacancy (NV) center magnetometers to resolve the spatial distribution of photocurrent flow in a 2D material by measuring the magnetic field profile produced by the photocurrents [1]. We reveal that photocurrent in monolayer MoS2 circulates as a micron-scale vortex under an external magnetic field due to a strong photo-Nernst effect. By synchronizing dynamical decoupling of the sensor spin with pulsed photoexcitation, we significantly enhance sensitivity and resolve current densities as small as 20 nA/μm. Importantly, our pulsed approach allows probing of the temporal dynamics of photocurrent generation with sub-microsecond resolution. This combined spatiotemporal resolution is invaluable for understanding how novel photocurrent generation mechanisms and local variations control the flow of photocurrent in next-generation optoelectronic devices.

[1] B. B. Zhou et al., arXiv:1903.09287 (2019).

In collaboration with P. C. Jerger, K.-H. Lee, M. Fukami, F. Mujid, J. Park, and D. D. Awschalom.

*This work is supported by the AFOSR, ARO, ONR, NSF, and UChicago and Cornell MRSECs.

Presenters

  • Brian Zhou

    • Boston College
    • Department of Physics, Boston College

Authors

  • Brian Zhou

    • Boston College
    • Department of Physics, Boston College