Ultrafast probes of electron–hole transitions between two atomic layers

Phase transitions of electron–hole pairs on semiconductor/conductor interfaces determine fundamental properties of optoelectronics. To investigate interfacial dynamical transitions of charged quasiparticles, however, remains a grand challenge. By employing ultrafast mid-infrared microspectroscopic p...

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Published inNature communications Vol. 9; no. 1; pp. 1859 - 9
Main Authors Wen, Xiewen, Chen, Hailong, Wu, Tianmin, Yu, Zhihao, Yang, Qirong, Deng, Jingwen, Liu, Zhengtang, Guo, Xin, Guan, Jianxin, Zhang, Xiang, Gong, Yongji, Yuan, Jiangtan, Zhang, Zhuhua, Yi, Chongyue, Guo, Xuefeng, Ajayan, Pulickel M., Zhuang, Wei, Liu, Zhirong, Lou, Jun, Zheng, Junrong
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group UK 10.05.2018
Nature Publishing Group
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Summary:Phase transitions of electron–hole pairs on semiconductor/conductor interfaces determine fundamental properties of optoelectronics. To investigate interfacial dynamical transitions of charged quasiparticles, however, remains a grand challenge. By employing ultrafast mid-infrared microspectroscopic probes to detect excitonic internal quantum transitions and two-dimensional atomic device fabrications, we are able to directly monitor the interplay between free carriers and insulating interlayer excitons between two atomic layers. Our observations reveal unexpected ultrafast formation of tightly bound interlayer excitons between conducting graphene and semiconducting MoSe 2 . The result suggests carriers in the doped graphene are no longer massless, and an effective mass as small as one percent of free electron mass is sufficient to confine carriers within a 2D hetero space with energy 10 times larger than the room-temperature thermal energy. The interlayer excitons arise within 1 ps. Their formation effectively blocks charge recombination and improves charge separation efficiency for more than one order of magnitude. The investigation into the dynamical transitions of charged quasiparticles on interfaces remains technically challenging. Here, the authors use ultrafast, mid-infrared micro-spectroscopy to unveil the formation of tightly bound interlayer excitons between conducting graphene and semiconducting MoSe 2 .
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ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-018-04291-9