| Literature DB >> 28607443 |
Guohua Wei1, David A Czaplewski2, Erik J Lenferink3, Teodor K Stanev3, Il Woong Jung2, Nathaniel P Stern4,5.
Abstract
Three-dimensional confinement allows semiconductor quantum dots to exhibit size-tunable electronic and optical properties that enable a wide range of opto-electronic applications from displays, solar cells and bio-medical imaging to single-electron devices. Additional modalities such as spin and valley properties in monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides provide further degrees of freedom requisite for information processing and spintronics. In nanostructures, however, spatial confinement can cause hybridization that inhibits the robustness of these emergent properties. Here, we show that laterally-confined excitons in monolayer MoS2 nanodots can be created through top-down nanopatterning with controlled size tunability. Unlike chemically-exfoliated monolayer nanoparticles, the lithographically patterned monolayer semiconductor nanodots down to a radius of 15 nm exhibit the same valley polarization as in a continuous monolayer sheet. The inherited bulk spin and valley properties, the size dependence of excitonic energies, and the ability to fabricate MoS2 nanostructures using semiconductor-compatible processing suggest that monolayer semiconductor nanodots have potential to be multimodal building blocks of integrated optoelectronics and spintronics systems.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28607443 PMCID: PMC5468254 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-03594-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Patterning of a 2D semiconductor into laterally-confined ML nanodots. (b) 2D confinement of excitons of Bohr radius a B in a potential well of radius R. (c) Spin-orbit coupling and inversion asymmetry in ML MoS2 give rise to valley-specific coupling to circularly-polarized light. Confinement can potentially enhance intervalley scattering (black lines) and suppress valley polarization.
Figure 2(a) Optical image of a nanopatterned sample. A 12 μm × 12 μm square of the ML MoS2 flake is processed into laterally confined nanodots. (b) AFM scan of a 1 μm × 1 μm region of patterned nanodots with dot spacing of 150 nm. (c) Nanodot size distribution from the AFM scan in (a). The size distribution is characterized by a normal distribution (red). For the sample shown, the average radius is R = 25 nm with a standard deviation of 3 nm. (d) PL spectra of nanodots (on dots, blue) and the continuous ML (off dots, black) from a single ML flake. (e) Size dependent exciton energy shift measured in ambient (blue square) and vacuum (red circle) conditions. (f) Linewidth reduction of nanodots measured in ambient (blue square) and in vacuum (red circle) conditions. All data in this figure are at room temperature.
Figure 3PL spectra characterization. (a) The PL of the nanodots (red) and continuous ML (blue) at 6 K both show features of excitonic and low-energy bound state emission. (b) Temperature dependence of the exciton energy E ex (solid) and linewidth Γ (empty) for nanodots (circles) and ML (squares). The lines are fits to the Manoogian-Wooley equation[62] and Eq. (2), respectively.
Figure 4Valley polarization characterization from a continuous ML and nanodots. (a,b) Circularly-polarized emission with pump energy of 2.07 eV. (c) Polarization P of PL with pump energy of 2.07 eV. (d,e) Circularly polarized PL with pump energy of 2.00 eV. (f) Polarization P with pump energy 2.00 eV. (g) Pump energy dependence of the continuous ML (off dots) and nanodots (on dots). The characteristic energy exponential decay scale is ξ = 74 meV for nanodots (red) and ξ = 79 meV for a continuous ML (blue). (h) The negligible change in PL circular polarization with confinement is independent of nanodot size. Polarization is measured with pump energy at 2.00 eV for (g,h). PL in this figure is collected at 6 K.