1 research outputs found
Spin-Stabilization by Coulomb Blockade in a Vanadium Dimer in WSe<sub>2</sub>
Charged dopants in 2D transition metal dichalcogenides
(TMDs) have
been associated with the formation of hydrogenic bound states, defect-bound
trions, and gate-controlled magnetism. Charge-transfer at the TMD–substrate
interface and the proximity to other charged defects can be used to
regulate the occupation of the dopant’s energy levels. In
this study, we examine vanadium-doped WSe2 monolayers on
quasi-freestanding epitaxial graphene, by high-resolution scanning
probe microscopy and ab initio calculations. Vanadium
atoms substitute W atoms and adopt a negative charge state through
charge donation from the graphene substrate. VW–1 dopants exhibit a series
of occupied p-type defect states, accompanied by
an intriguing electronic fine-structure that we attribute to hydrogenic
states bound to the charged impurity. We systematically studied the
hybridization in V dimers with different separations. For large dimer
separations, the 2e– charge state
prevails, and the magnetic moment is quenched. However, the Coulomb
blockade in the nearest-neighbor dimer configuration stabilizes a
1e– charge state. The nearest-neighbor
V-dimer exhibits an open-shell character for the frontier defect orbital,
giving rise to a paramagnetic ground state. Our findings provide microscopic
insights into the charge stabilization and many-body effects of single
dopants and dopant pairs in a TMD host material