Electrical Manipulation of Intervalley Trions in Twisted MoSe2 Homobilayers at Room Temperature

The impressive physics and applications of intra‐ and interlayer excitons in a transition metal dichalcogenide twisted‐bilayer make these systems compelling platforms for exploring the manipulation of their optoelectronic properties through electrical fields. This work studies the electrical control...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inAdvanced Physics Research Vol. 4; no. 5
Main Authors Rosa, Bárbara L. T., Junior, Paulo E. Faria, Cadore, Alisson R., Yang, Yuhui, Koulas‐Simos, Aris, Palekar, Chirag C., Tongay, Seth Ariel, Fabian, Jaroslav, Reitzenstein, Stephan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Wiley-VCH 01.05.2025
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Summary:The impressive physics and applications of intra‐ and interlayer excitons in a transition metal dichalcogenide twisted‐bilayer make these systems compelling platforms for exploring the manipulation of their optoelectronic properties through electrical fields. This work studies the electrical control of excitonic complexes in twisted MoSe2 homobilayer devices at room temperature. Gate‐dependent micro‐photoluminescence spectroscopy reveals an energy tunability of several meVs originating from the emission of excitonic complexes. Furthermore, this study investigates the twist‐angle dependence of valley properties by fabricating devices with stacking angles of θ ∼ 1°, θ ∼ 4° and θ ∼ 18°. Strengthened by density functional theory calculations, the results suggest that, depending on the twist angle, the conduction band minima and hybridized states at the Q‐point promote the formation of intervalley hybrid trions involving the Q‐and K‐points in the conduction band and the K‐point in the valence band. By revealing the gate control of exciton species in twisted homobilayers, these findings open new avenues for engineering multifunctional optoelectronic devices based on ultrathin semiconducting systems. This study explores electrical control of excitonic complexes in twisted MoSe2 homobilayer devices at room temperature. Gate‐dependent photoluminescence reveals distinct exciton‐trion conversion response, analyzed for angles of ∼1°, ∼4°, and ∼18°. Density functional theory calculations suggest the formation of intervalley hybrid trions that exhibit a clear twist‐angle‐dependent behavior.
ISSN:2751-1200
2751-1200
DOI:10.1002/apxr.202400135