| Literature DB >> 30021441 |
Yang Li1, Tianmeng Wang, Han Wang, Zhipeng Li2, Yanwen Chen, Damien West, Raman Sankar3,4, Rajesh K Ulaganathan3,4, Fangcheng Chou3,4, Christian Wetzel, Cheng-Yan Xu1, Shengbai Zhang, Su-Fei Shi.
Abstract
InSe, a newly rediscovered two-dimensional (2D) semiconductor, possesses superior electrical and optical properties as a direct-band-gap semiconductor with high mobility from bulk to atomically thin layers and is drastically different from transition-metal dichalcogenides, in which the direct band gap only exists at the single-layer limit. However, absorption in InSe is mostly dominated by an out-of-plane dipole contribution, which results in the limited absorption of normally incident light that can only excite the in-plane dipole at resonance. To address this challenge, we have explored a unique geometric ridge state of the 2D flake without compromising the sample quality. We observed the enhanced absorption at the ridge over a broad range of excitation frequencies from photocurrent and photoluminescence (PL) measurements. In addition, we have discovered new PL peaks at low temperatures due to defect states on the ridge, which can be as much as ∼60 times stronger than the intrinsic PL peak of InSe. Interestingly, the PL of the defects is highly tunable through an external electrical field, which can be attributed to the Stark effect of the localized defects. InSe ridges thus provide new avenues for manipulating light-matter interactions and defect engineering that are vitally crucial for novel optoelectronic devices based on 2D semiconductors.Entities:
Keywords: Indium selenide; defect emission; ridges; selection rules; stark effect
Year: 2018 PMID: 30021441 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.8b01940
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189