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Photoexcitations and optical response of carrier-doped monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides and heterostructures from first principles

ORAL

Abstract

The optoelectronic properties of 2D semiconductors are highly sensitive to the surrounding dielectric environment, a direct result of intrinsic weak and highly non-local dielectric screening. Less studied is the role of free carrier density on those properties. While the ab initio GW plus BSE approach is the state-of-the-art method for the accurate prediction of one and two particle excitations, respectively, the BSE is typically solved in the static limit, acceptable if the exciton binding energy is much smaller than the plasma frequency, but inadequate for systems with finite carrier density displaying acoustic carrier plasmon energies below or nearly resonant with the exciton binding energy. We develop a plasmon-pole model that captures dynamical screening associated with free carriers and local-field effects. We apply this approach to study the doping-dependence of the QP and optical properties of a monolayer MoTe2 and of organic-TMD bilayer interfaces. For the former, we predict a QP band gap renormalization of several hundreds meV, and a similar decrease in the exciton binding energy. For the interface, we predict a transition from type-I to type-II interface and the emergence of new interlayer excitons, resulting from an interplay between charge carrier screening and substrate screening.

Presenters

  • Aurelie Champagne

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Authors

  • Aurelie Champagne

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Jonah B Haber

    University of California, Berkeley, Materials Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Supavit Pokawanvit

    Stanford University

  • Olugbenga M Adeniran

    Wayne State University

  • Zhenfei Liu

    Wayne State University

  • Diana Y Qiu

    Yale University

  • Felipe H da Jornada

    Stanford University, Stanford

  • Jeffrey B Neaton

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, Department of Physics, University of California, Berkeley; Materials Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory; Kavli Energy NanoScience Institute at Berkeley