| Literature DB >> 34194018 |
Tomasz Smoleński1, Pavel E Dolgirev2, Clemens Kuhlenkamp3,4,5, Alexander Popert3, Yuya Shimazaki3, Patrick Back3, Xiaobo Lu3, Martin Kroner3, Kenji Watanabe6, Takashi Taniguchi7, Ilya Esterlis2, Eugene Demler8,9, Ataç Imamoğlu10.
Abstract
When the Coulomb repulsion between electrons dominates over their kinetic energy, electrons in two-dimensional systems are predicted to spontaneously break continuous-translation symmetry and form a quantum crystal1. Efforts to observe2-12 this elusive state of matter, termed a Wigner crystal, in two-dimensional extended systems have primarily focused on conductivity measurements on electrons confined to a single Landau level at high magnetic fields. Here we use optical spectroscopy to demonstrate that electrons in a monolayer semiconductor with density lower than 3 × 1011 per centimetre squared form a Wigner crystal. The combination of a high electron effective mass and reduced dielectric screening enables us to observe electronic charge order even in the absence of a moiré potential or an external magnetic field. The interactions between a resonantly injected exciton and electrons arranged in a periodic lattice modify the exciton bandstructure so that an umklapp resonance arises in the optical reflection spectrum, heralding the presence of charge order13. Our findings demonstrate that charge-tunable transition metal dichalcogenide monolayers14 enable the investigation of previously uncharted territory for many-body physics where interaction energy dominates over kinetic energy.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34194018 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03590-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962