Magnetic-field-induced Wigner crystallization of charged interlayer excitons in van der Waals heterostructures

ORAL

Abstract

We develop the theory of the magnetic-field-induced Wigner crystallization effect for charged interlayer excitons (CIE) discovered recently in transition-metal-dichalcogenide (TMD) heterobilayers [1]. We derive the ratio of the average potential interaction energy to the average kinetic energy for the many-particle CIE system subjected to the perpendicular magnetic field of an arbitrary strength, analyze the weak and strong field regimes, and discuss the 'cold' crystallization phase transition for the CIE system in the strong field regime [2]. We also generalize the effective g-factor concept previously formulated for interlayer excitons [3], to include the formation of CIEs in electrostatically doped TMD heterobilayers. We show that magnetic-field-induced Wigner crystallization and melting of CIEs can be observed in strong-field magneto-photoluminescence experiments with TMD heterobilayes of systematically varied electron-hole doping concentrations. Our results advance the capabilities of the TMD bilayers as a new family of transdimensional quantum materials. – [1] L.A.Jauregui, et al., Science 366, 870 (2019); [2] I.V.Bondarev and Yu.E.Lozovik, arXiv:2112.13995 (to appear in Communications Physics - Nature); [3] P.Nagler, et al., Nature Communications 8, 1551 (2017).

*This research is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of BES under award No.DE-SC0007117 (I.V.B.) and by the RFBR grants No. 20-02-00410 and No. 20-52-00035 (Yu.E.L.). Yu.E.L. is supported by the Basic Research Program at the National Research University HSE. I.V.B. acknowledges hospitality of the Kavli Institute for theoretical Physics (KITP), UC Santa Barbara, where this work was completed during his invited visit as a KITP Fellow 2022–23 (the research program supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation under Grant No. PHY-1748958).

Publication: I.V.Bondarev and Yu.E.Lozovik, arXiv:2112.13995 (to appear in Communications Physics - Nature)

Presenters

  • Yu (Yurii) E Lozovik

    • Institute of Spectroscopy, Russian Academy of Sciences
    • Russian Institute of Spectroscopy

Authors

  • Igor V Bondarev

    • North Carolina Central University
  • Yu (Yurii) E Lozovik

    • Institute of Spectroscopy, Russian Academy of Sciences
    • Russian Institute of Spectroscopy