APS Logo

Tunable quantum traps for excitons in 2D semiconductors

ORAL

Abstract

The realization of fully tunable quantum emitters in solid state systems has been an outstanding goal of optoelectronics and quantum photonics. In this talk, we will discuss our recent experimental results demonstrating quantum confinement of neutral excitons in monolayer Transition metal dichalcogenides with full electrical control [1]. We show that excitons can be quantum confined to below 10 nanometers using strong in-plane electric fields that induce a dc Stark shift. Using optical spectroscopy, we observe discrete excitonic states below the continuum that originate from the quantization of the motional states of excitons due to confinement. Furthermore, through magneto-optical measurements, we find that the electric field induced confinement has a dramatic influence also on the relative wavefunction of excitons. We anticipate that our quantum confinement approach may provide a scalable platform for arrays of identical single photon sources and constitute building blocks of strongly correlated photonic many-body systems.

Publication: D. Thureja et. al, Nature, 606, 298-304 (2022)

Presenters

  • Puneet A. Murthy

    ETH Zurich, NTT Research Inc.

Authors

  • Puneet A. Murthy

    ETH Zurich, NTT Research Inc.

  • Deepankur Thureja

    ETH Zurich

  • Atac Imamoglu

    ETH Zurich

  • Tomasz Smolenski

    ETH Zurich

  • Ivan Amelio

    ETH Zurich

  • Alexander Popert

    ETH Zurich

  • Thibault Chervy

    NTT Research Inc

  • David J Norris

    ETH Zurich

  • Martin Kroner

    ETH Zurich