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Enhanced multiexciton formation by an electron-hole plasma in 2D semiconductors

ORAL

Abstract

Transition metal dichalcogenide semiconductors are layered van der Walls materials that exhibit exceptional optoelectronic properties in monolayer form. Their atomically thin nature and reduced long-range dielectric screening make them ideal systems in which to study a rich suite of many-body electronic states that emerges from intense coulomb interactions between quantum-confined charge carriers in a truly 2D system. Using photoluminescence action spectroscopy of monolayer WSe2, we find an enhancement of multiexciton formation with increasing excitation energy. This enhancement is attributed to the formation of excitons from a high-energy electron-hole plasma and generates 200% more multiexciton states than lower-energy excitation. The enhancement does not affect relaxation dynamics and its onset coincides with the energy of the quasiparticle bandgap, corroborating the role of the electron-hole plasma and highlighting how the formation of excited states can be uniquely manipulated in 2D semiconductors. Understanding these formation and relaxation dynamics of the rich manifold of exciton states is critical for leveraging this new class of 2D semiconductors for advanced technologies.

Presenters

  • Matthew Strasbourg

    Montana State University, Bozeman

Authors

  • Matthew Strasbourg

    Montana State University, Bozeman

  • Cory Johns

    Montana State University, Bozeman

  • Zoe E Noble

    Montana State University, Bozeman

  • Emanuil Yanev

    Mechanical Engineering, Columbia University, Columbia University

  • Thomas Darlington

    Mechanical Engineering, Columbia University, Columbia University

  • P. James Schuck

    Mechanical Engineering, Columbia University, Columbia University, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Columbia University

  • James Hone

    Columbia Univ, Columbia University, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Columbia University, Mechanical Engineering, Columbia University

  • Nicholas Borys

    Montana State University, Bozeman, Physics, Montana State University, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory