MRS Meetings and Events

 

NM01.01.05 2022 MRS Fall Meeting

Diverse Nature of Excitonic States in Transition Metal Dichalcogenide Moiré Superlattices

When and Where

Nov 29, 2022
11:00am - 11:30am

Hynes, Level 2, Room 205

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Mit Naik1,2

University of California at Berkeley1,Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory2

Abstract

Mit Naik1,2

University of California at Berkeley1,Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory2
Recent experimental measurements have demonstrated signatures of novel exciton states in moiré superlattices of bilayer transition metal dichalcogenides. However, the microscopic nature and origin of these moiré excitons was not well understood, and previous studies relied often on empirically fit models that did not fully account for the electron and hole degrees of freedom of the exciton. We performed state-of-the-art first-principles <i>GW</i>-Bethe Salpeter equation calculations and discovered a rich diversity of excitonic states in large-area transition metal dichalcogenide moiré superlattices. These studies, which involve thousands of atoms in the reconstructed moiré unit-cell, are made possible by a novel computational approach we developed, the pristine unit-cell matrix projection (PUMP) method [1]. In rotationally aligned WSe<sub>2</sub>/WS<sub>2</sub> moiré superlattice, we find some excitons of a modulated Wannier character and others of a previously unidentified intralayer charge-transfer character [1]. In 57.7° twisted bilayer WS<sub>2</sub>, we discover layer-hybridized excitons with in-plane charge transfer character. These characteristics originate from the strong modulation of electron wavefunctions due to atomic reconstructions of the moiré superlattice. Due to the weaker binding and larger spatial extent of the in-plane charge-transfer excitons, they can be strongly modulated by external electrical field, doping charges, and substrate screening. Experimental reflection contrast [1], electron energy loss spectroscopy [2] and scanning tunneling spectroscopy confirm these predictions. <br/> <br/>Acknowledgment: This work is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation, and the theoretical studies are done in collaboration with Y. Chan, Z. Li, C. S. Ong, W. Kim, F. H. da Jornada and S. G. Louie.<br/> <br/>References:<br/>[1] M. H. Naik, E. C. Regan, Z. Zhang, …, F. H. da Jornada, F. Wang and S. G. Louie, “Intralayer charge-transfer moiré excitons in van der Waals superlattices”, Nature 609, 52–57 (2022)<br/>[2] S. Susarla, M. H. Naik, …, F. H. da Jornada, S. G. Louie, P. Ercius and A. Raja, “Hyperspectral imaging of excitons within a moiré unit-cell with a sub-nanometer electron probe”, arXiv:2207.13823 (2022)

Keywords

scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM)

Symposium Organizers

Arend van der Zande, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign
Johannes Lischner, Imperial College London
Sufei Shi, Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst
Jairo Velasco, Univ of California-Berkeley

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature