| Literature DB >> 27819288 |
Malte Selig1, Gunnar Berghäuser1, Archana Raja2,3, Philipp Nagler4, Christian Schüller4, Tony F Heinz3,5,6, Tobias Korn4, Alexey Chernikov4,6, Ermin Malic7, Andreas Knorr1.
Abstract
Atomically thin transition metal dichalcogenides are direct-gap semiconductors with strong light-matter and Coulomb interactions. The latter accounts for tightly bound excitons, which dominate their optical properties. Besides the optically accessible bright excitons, these systems exhibit a variety of dark excitonic states. They are not visible in the optical spectra, but can strongly influence the coherence lifetime and the linewidth of the emission from bright exciton states. Here, we investigate the microscopic origin of the excitonic coherence lifetime in two representative materials (WS2 and MoSe2) through a study combining microscopic theory with spectroscopic measurements. We show that the excitonic coherence lifetime is determined by phonon-induced intravalley scattering and intervalley scattering into dark excitonic states. In particular, in WS2, we identify exciton relaxation processes involving phonon emission into lower-lying dark states that are operative at all temperatures.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27819288 PMCID: PMC5103057 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13279
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Relaxation channels determining the excitonic coherence lifetime.
(a) Schematic representation of the minima of the excitonic centre-of-mass motion (Q) dispersion E(Q). A K–K exciton can decay via radiative γrad (blue arrow) or non-radiative dephasing γnon-rad. The latter occurs through exciton–phonon scattering within the K−K valley (orange) or to dark K−Λ (red) or K−K′ (brown) excitonic states. For WS2, the intervalley K−Λ and K−K′ excitons lie energetically below the K−K exciton (ΔE<0) allowing efficient scattering via emission of phonons even at very low temperatures. The dashed dispersion curves refer to a situation typical in MoSe2, where ΔE>0. (b) A K−K (K−Λ, K−K′) exciton is formed by a hole (red) at the K point and an electron (blue) at the K (Λ,K′) point.
Figure 2Calculated homogeneous broadening and coherence lifetime.
Predicted absorption spectrum of (a) WS2 and (b) MoSe2 for the energetically lowest resonance of the A exciton. All spectra were normalized to have the same peak value. While the blue line only includes the radiative linewidth, the other lines also contain non-radiative contributions due to exciton–phonon scattering at different temperatures. The magnitude of the microscopic polarization for (c) WS2 and (d) MoSe2 following excitation by a 10 fs pulse at t=0 (filled curve).
Figure 3Excitonic linewidth and lifetime.
Temperature dependence of the linewidth and lifetime of the A exciton in (a) WS2 and (b) MoSe2. The red and black points correspond to the minimum and maximum limits of the homogeneous linewidths extracted from experiment, respectively (see Methods section). The thick red line shows the total predicted linewidth consisting of the single contributions from the radiative decay γrad (blue) and non-radiative decay from intravalley exciton–phonon coupling (orange) and intervalley coupling and (dashed orange). Note that the latter contribution is very small.