Emergent excitons in super-twisted spiral transition metal dichalcogenide
ORAL
Abstract
Twisted transition metal dichalcogenide heterostructures have created a flatland for studying strongly correlated electrons by the formation of tunable moiré bands. Compared to the initial demonstration of magic-angle twisted bilayer graphene, the twisted semiconductor layers not only enable flat bands over a wide continuous range of twist angles but also provide bounded electron-hole pairs, excitons, enabling emergent optical phenomena. Here we unveil a new type of exciton created by bulk-like super-twisting of WS2 layers, which is caused by the third-dimensional symmetry breaking and is much stronger than the moiré excitons.
The hundred-nanometer thick super-twisted WS2 are directly grown by chemical vapor deposition utilizing screw dislocations and non-Euclidean substrate geometry. The high crystal quality is proven by real-space imaging of waveguide modes and their large quality factors by scattering-type scanning nearfield microscopy. The super-twisted spirals bring about a new collection of symmetries observed by second-harmonic generation mapping. Most importantly, by measuring temperature-dependent photoluminescence, emergent long-wavelength excitonic peaks are uncovered under 160 K with comparable intensity with A excitons. The position and strength of these peaks are dependent on super-twist angles and absent on non-twisted spirals. The formation of these excitons is inherited from the drastically modified band structure by 3D super-twisting, supported by tight-binding calculations.
The hundred-nanometer thick super-twisted WS2 are directly grown by chemical vapor deposition utilizing screw dislocations and non-Euclidean substrate geometry. The high crystal quality is proven by real-space imaging of waveguide modes and their large quality factors by scattering-type scanning nearfield microscopy. The super-twisted spirals bring about a new collection of symmetries observed by second-harmonic generation mapping. Most importantly, by measuring temperature-dependent photoluminescence, emergent long-wavelength excitonic peaks are uncovered under 160 K with comparable intensity with A excitons. The position and strength of these peaks are dependent on super-twist angles and absent on non-twisted spirals. The formation of these excitons is inherited from the drastically modified band structure by 3D super-twisting, supported by tight-binding calculations.
*LK acknowledges support from the DFG through FOR 5249 (QUAST, Project No. 449872909) and computing time granted through JARA on the supercomputer JURECA at Forschungszentrum Jülich.
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Publication: Yuzhou Zhao et al. ,Supertwisted spirals of layered materials enabled by growth on non-Euclidean surfaces.Science370,442-445(2020)
Presenters
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Yinan Dong
- Columbia University