84 research outputs found
Breathing modes in few-layer MoTe activated by h-BN encapsulation
The encapsulation of few-layer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) in
hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) is known to improve significantly their optical
and electronic properties. However, it may be expected that the h-BN
encapsulation may affect also vibration properties of TMDs due to an atomically
flat surface of h-BN layers. In order to study its effect on interlayer
interactions in few-layer TMDs, we investigate low-energy Raman scattering
spectra of bi- and trilayer MoTe. Surprisingly, three breathing modes are
observed in the Raman spectra of the structures deposited on or encapsulated in
h-BN as compared to a single breathing mode for the flakes deposited on a
SiO/Si substrate. The shear mode is not affected by changing the MoTe
environment. The emerged structure of breathing modes is ascribed to the
apparent interaction between the MoTe layer and the bottom h-BN flake. The
structure becomes visible due to a high-quality surface of the former flake.
Consequently, the observed triple structure of breathing modes originates from
the combination modes due to interlayer and layer-substrate interactions. Our
results confirm that the h-BN encapsulation affects substantially vibration
properties of layered materials.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure
Single-photon emission from the natural quantum dots in the InAs/GaAs wetting layer
Time-resolved microphotoluminescence study is presented for quantum dots
which are formed in the InAs/GaAs wetting layer. These dots are due to
fluctuations of In composition in the wetting layer. They show spectrally sharp
luminescence lines with a low spatial density. We identify lines related to
neutral exciton and biexciton as well as trions. Exciton emission antibunching
(second order correlation value of g^2(0)=0.16) and biexciton-exciton emission
cascade prove non-classical emission from the dots and confirm their potential
as single photon sources
Raman scattering from the bulk inactive out-of-plane B mode in few-layer MoTe
Raman scattering from the out-of-plane vibrational modes
(A/A'), which originate from the bulk-inactive out-of-plane
B mode, are studied in few-layer MoTe.
Temperature-dependent measurements reveal a doublet structure of the
corresponding peaks in the Raman scattering spectra of tetralayer and
pentalayer samples. A strong enhancement of their lower energy components is
recorded at low temperature for 1.91 eV and 1.96 eV laser excitation. We
discuss the attribution of the peaks to the inner modes of the respective
Raman-active vibrations. The temperature evolution of their intensity strongly
suggests a resonant character of the employed excitation, which leads to the
mode enhancement at low temperature. The resonance of the laser light with the
singularity of the electronic density of states at the point of the
Brillouin zone in MoTe is proposed to be responsible for the observed
effects.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Neutral and charged dark excitons in monolayer WS
Low temperature and polarization resolved magneto-photoluminescence
experiments are used to investigate the properties of dark excitons and dark
trions in a monolayer of WS encapsulated in hexagonal BN (hBN). We find
that this system is an -type doped semiconductor and that dark trions
dominate the emission spectrum. In line with previous studies on WSe, we
identify the Coulomb exchange interaction coupled neutral dark and grey
excitons through their polarization properties, while an analogous effect is
not observed for dark trions. Applying the magnetic field in both perpendicular
and parallel configurations with respect to the monolayer plane, we determine
the g-factor of dark trions to be -8.6. Their decay rate is close to 0.5
ns, more than 2 orders of magnitude longer than that of bright excitons.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, supplemental materia
Pressure-driven phase transitions in bulk HfS
The effect of hydrostatic pressure up to 27 GPa on the Raman scattering (RS)
in bulk HfS is investigated. There are two transformations of RS spectra,
which take place during compression at pressure between 5.7 GPa and 9.8 GPa as
well as between 12.8 GPa and 15.2 GPa. Seven vibrational modes can be observed
after the transformation, as compared to four modes before the transformation.
The observed change suggests structural change in the material of yet unknown
nature. The frequencies of the RS modes observed above the transformation
change linearly with pressure and corresponding pressure coefficients have been
determined. The other transition manifests itself as a change in the RS
lineshape. While a series of well-defined RS modes are observed under pressure
below the transition, broad spectral bands can be seen at higher pressure. The
overall lineshape of the spectra resembles that of disordered materials. The
lineshape does not change during decompression, which suggests permanent nature
of the high-pressure transition.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Energy spectrum of two-dimensional excitons in a non-uniform dielectric medium
We demonstrate that, in monolayers (MLs) of semiconducting transition metal
dichalcogenides, the -type Rydberg series of excitonic states follows a
simple energy ladder: , =1,2,\ldots, in which
is very close to the Rydberg energy scaled by the dielectric constant of
the medium surrounding the ML and by the reduced effective electron-hole mass,
whereas the ML polarizability is only accounted for by . This is
justified by the analysis of experimental data on excitonic resonances, as
extracted from magneto-optical measurements of a high-quality WSe ML
encapsulated in hexagonal boron nitride (hBN), and well reproduced with an
analytically solvable Schr\"odinger equation when approximating the
electron-hole potential in the form of a modified Kratzer potential. Applying
our convention to other, MoSe, WS, MoS MLs encapsulated in hBN, we
estimate an apparent magnitude of for each of the studied structures.
Intriguingly, is found to be close to zero for WSe as well as for
MoS monolayers, what implies that the energy ladder of excitonic states in
these two-dimensional structures resembles that of Rydberg states of a
three-dimensional hydrogen atom.Comment: Manuscript: 6 pages, 4 figures; SM: 11 pages, 12 figure
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