MRS Meetings and Events

 

QT03.07.05 2024 MRS Spring Meeting

Anomalous Interlayer Exciton Diffusion in WS2/WSe2 Moiré Heterostructure

When and Where

Apr 25, 2024
3:30pm - 4:00pm

Room 444, Level 4, Summit

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Archana Raja1

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory1

Abstract

Archana Raja1

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory1
Stacking van der Waals crystals allows for on-demand creation of a periodic potential landscape to tailor the transport of quasiparticle excitations. We investigate the diffusion of photoexcited electron-hole pairs or excitons at the interface of WS2/WSe2 Van der Waals heterostructure over a wide range of temperatures. We observe the appearance of distinct interlayer excitons for parallel and anti-parallel stacking, and track their diffusion through spatially and temporally resolved photoluminescence spectroscopy from 30 K to 250 K. While the measured exciton diffusivity decreases with temperature, it surprisingly plateaus below 90 K. Our observations cannot be explained by classical models like hopping in the moiré potential. Using a combination of ab-initio theory and molecular dynamics simulations, we demonstrate that low energy moiré phonons, also known as phasons, may play a key role in describing and understanding this anomalous behavior of exciton diffusion. In particular, we show that the moiré potential landscape is dynamic down to very low temperatures. Our observations show that the phason modes arising from the mismatched lattices of a moiré heterostructures can enable surprisingly efficient transport of energy in the form of excitons, even at low temperatures.<br/><br/>Rossi, Antonio, et al. <i>arXiv preprint arXiv:2301.07750</i> (2023)

Keywords

2D materials | nanoscale

Symposium Organizers

Michal Baranowski, Wroclaw University of Science and Technology
Alexey Chernikov, Technische Universität Dresden
Paulina Plochocka, CNRS
Alexander Urban, LMU Munich

Symposium Support

Bronze
LIGHT CONVERSION
Wroclaw University of Science and Technology

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature