| Literature DB >> 31844067 |
Qinsheng Wang1,2, Jingchuan Zheng1,2, Yuan He1,2, Jin Cao1, Xin Liu3, Maoyuan Wang1, Junchao Ma3, Jiawei Lai3, Hong Lu3, Shuang Jia3,4, Dayu Yan5, Youguo Shi5, Junxi Duan1,2, Junfeng Han1,2, Wende Xiao1,2, Jian-Hao Chen3,4, Kai Sun6, Yugui Yao7,8, Dong Sun9,10.
Abstract
Photosensing and energy harvesting based on exotic properties of quantum materials and new operation principles have great potential to break the fundamental performance limit of conventional photodetectors and solar cells. Weyl semimetals have demonstrated novel optoelectronic properties that promise potential applications in photodetection and energy harvesting arising from their gapless linear dispersion and Berry field enhanced nonlinear optical effect at the vicinity of Weyl nodes. In this work, we demonstrate robust photocurrent generation at the edge of Td-WTe2, a type-II Weyl semimetal, due to crystalline-symmetry breaking along certain crystal fracture directions and possibly enhanced by robust fermi-arc type surface states. This edge response is highly generic and arises universally in a wide class of quantum materials with similar crystal symmetries. The robust and generic edge current response provides a charge separation mechanism for photosensing and energy harvesting over broad wavelength range.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31844067 PMCID: PMC6915719 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-13713-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Edge photocurrent response in WTe2.
a Schematic diagram of scanning photocurrent measurement of a WTe2 field effect device. b, c Crystal structure of WTe2. Top view of the crystal structure of plane (b) and cross-section view of the interlayer stacking structure (c) of Td- WTe2. d, e Scanning reflection image (d) and scanning photocurrent response (e) of a typical 6-nm thick WTe2 device. The measurement was performed with 633-nm light filtered from white light super-continuum and the power shine on the sample was about 15 μW. The excitation light was focused using a 100× objective lens and the focused spot size was 0.85 μm. The inset of Figure e is the optical microscope image and the white arrow marks the crystallographic -axis. The scale bars are all 2 μm.
Fig. 2Photocurrent response from edges along different directions.
a and b Optical microscope image (a) and scanning photocurrent image (b) of a device with irregular shape. c and d, Optical microscope image (c) and scanning photocurrent image (d) of a device with trapezium shape. e, f, g and h Optical microscope image (e) and scanning photocurrent image of different parts (f, g, and h) of a long device with edges along various crystal fracture directions. All measurements were excited with 180-μW 1.96-eV pulse laser. The white arrows in microscopy images mark the crystallographic -axis and the white dashed lines mark the edges that have no photocurrent responses. The red symbols in Figure (a) display the point group symmetries of the crystal lattice. Photocurrents only arise along edges that break the mirror symmetry, in good agreement with the symmetry analysis. The scale bars are all 8 μm.
Fig. 3Symmetry analysis of edges along different directions of WTe2.
a and b Schematic of lattice structures with edges along <100> (a) and <110> (b) directions respectively. The unit cell is shadowed in a blue rectangular in each Figure. The mirror plane Ma of the <100> direction is marked by solid line and the glide mirror plane Mb of the <010> direction is marked by dash line in Figure a, the screw axis along the <001> direction is marked by symbol 21. c Collection of the local photocurrent from a WTe2 device in a Shockley-Ramo-type scheme. The solid gray lines are the weighting field lines of the device used in Fig. 2a with the source contact set at 1 V and the drain contact set at 0 V. The red arrows represent the possible directions of local edge photocurrent. The simulations are performed using COMSOL. d The distribution of Weyl nodes in bulk WTe2 and the projections of Weyl nodes on (100), (010) and (110) surfaces. WTe2 has eight Weyl nodes all locating in kc = 0 plane, each four symmetry-related nodes are referred as W1 and W2 respectively. The mirror symmetry-related Weyl nodes with opposite chirality annihilate in pairs when projected onto (100) and (010) surfaces, but the Fermi arcs can survive in higher Miller-index surface BZs.
Fig. 4Excitation power and polarization dependence of edge photocurrent.
a Power dependence of the edge photocurrent responses with 1.96-eV pulse excitation. b, c Scanning photocurrent microscopies under horizontal- (b) and vertical-polarized (c) light excitation respectively. The light polarization is marked by the red arrows. d Polarization dependent photocurrent responses with light focused on the spot marked by a red circle in Figure b. e–h Scanning photocurrent microscopies with excitation photon energies of 1.96 eV (e), 0.89 eV (f), 0.31 eV (g) and 0.12 eV (h) respectively. All measurements were performed on the device shown in Fig. 2a. The scale bars are all 8 μm.