APS Logo

Magnetically confined surface and bulk excitons in a layered antiferromagnet

ORAL

Abstract

The discovery of two-dimensional (2D) van der Waals magnets has greatly expanded our ability to create and control nanoscale quantum phases. A unique capability emerges when a 2D magnet is also a semiconductor, featuring tightly bound excitons with large oscillator strengths that fundamentally determining the optical response and are tunable with magnetic fields. Structural and magnetic anisotropies can lead to anisotropic 2D excitons and even hybrid-dimensional excitons. Here we report a previously unidentified type of optical excitation – a magnetic surface exciton – enabled by the antiferromagnetic spin correlations that confine excitons to the surface of CrSBr. Magnetic surface excitons exhibit stronger Coulomb attraction and thus a higher binding energy than excitons confined in bulk layers, which profoundly alter the optical response of few-layer crystals. Distinct magnetic confinement of surface and bulk excitons is established by layer- and temperature-dependent exciton reflection spectroscopy and corroborated by ab initio many-body perturbation theory calculations. By quenching interlayer excitonic interactions, the antiferromagnetic order of CrSBr strictly confines the bound electron-hole pairs within the same layer, regardless of the total number of layers. Our work unveils novel confined excitons in a layered antiferromagnet, highlighting magnetic interactions as a vital approach for nanoscale quantum confinement, from few layers to the bulk limit.

Presenters

  • Yinming Shao

    Pennsylvania State University, Columbia University, Pennsylvania State University

Authors

  • Yinming Shao

    Pennsylvania State University, Columbia University, Pennsylvania State University

  • Florian Dirnberger

    Technische Universität Dresden

  • Siyuan Qiu

    Columbia University

  • Swagata Acharya

    National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)

  • Sophia Terres

    TUD Dresden University of Technology

  • Evan J Telford

    Columbia University

  • Dimitar Pashov

    King's College London, King's College London, The Strand, London WC2R2LS, UK

  • Brian Sae Yoon Kim

    Columbia University

  • Frank L Ruta

    Columbia University

  • Daniel G Chica

    Columbia University, Northwestern University, Columbia

  • Michael E Ziebel

    Columbia University

  • Yiping Wang

    Boston College, Columbia University

  • Jeongheon Choe

    Columbia University

  • Youn Jue Bae

    Cornell University

  • Andrew J Millis

    Columbia University

  • Mikhail I Katsnelson

    Radboud University

  • Kseniia Mosina

    University of Chemistry and Technology Prague

  • Zdenek Sofer

    University of Chemistry and Technology Prague, Department of Inorganic Chemistry, University of Chemistry and Technology Prague

  • Rupert Huber

    University of Regensburg

  • Xiaoyang Zhu

    Columbia University

  • Xavier Roy

    Columbia University

  • Mark van Schilfgaarde

    National Renewable Energy Laboratory, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, Colorado 80401, USA

  • Alexey Chernikov

    TUD Dresden University of Technology

  • Dmitri N Basov

    Columbia University