2,280 research outputs found
Intervalley coupling by quantum dot confinement potentials in monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides
Monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) offer new opportunities for
realizing quantum dots (QDs) in the ultimate two-dimensional (2D) limit. Given
the rich control possibilities of electron valley pseudospin discovered in the
monolayers, this quantum degree of freedom can be a promising carrier of
information for potential quantum spintronics exploiting single electrons in
TMD QDs. An outstanding issue is to identify the degree of valley
hybridization, due to the QD confinement, which may significantly change the
valley physics in QDs from its form in the 2D bulk. Here we perform a
systematic study of the intervalley coupling by QD confinement potentials on
extended TMD monolayers. We find that the intervalley coupling in such geometry
is generically weak due to the vanishing amplitude of the electron wavefunction
at the QD boundary, and hence valley hybridization shall be well quenched by
the much stronger spin-valley coupling in monolayer TMDs and the QDs can well
inherit the valley physics of the 2D bulk. We also discover sensitive
dependence of intervalley coupling strength on the central position and the
lateral length scales of the confinement potentials, which may possibly allow
tuning of intervalley coupling by external controlsComment: 17 pages, 14 figure
Moir\'e excitons: from programmable quantum emitter arrays to spin-orbit coupled artificial lattices
Highly uniform and ordered nanodot arrays are crucial for high performance
quantum optoelectronics including new semiconductor lasers and single photon
emitters, and for synthesizing artificial lattices of interacting
quasiparticles towards quantum information processing and simulation of
many-body physics. Van der Waals heterostructures of 2D semiconductors are
naturally endowed with an ordered nanoscale landscape, i.e. the moir\'e pattern
that laterally modulates electronic and topographic structures. Here we find
these moir\'e effects realize superstructures of nanodot confinements for
long-lived interlayer excitons, which can be either electrically or strain
tuned from perfect arrays of quantum emitters to excitonic superlattices with
giant spin-orbit coupling (SOC). Besides the wide range tuning of emission
wavelength, the electric field can also invert the spin optical selection rule
of the emitter arrays. This unprecedented control arises from the gauge
structure imprinted on exciton wavefunctions by the moir\'e, which underlies
the SOC when hopping couples nanodots into superlattices. We show that the
moir\'e hosts complex-hopping honeycomb superlattices, where exciton bands
feature a Dirac node and two Weyl nodes, connected by spin-momentum locked
topological edge modes.Comment: To appear in Science Advance
Coupled spin and valley physics in monolayers of MoS2 and other group-VI dichalcogenides
We show that inversion symmetry breaking together with spin-orbit coupling
leads to coupled spin and valley physics in monolayers of MoS2 and other
group-VI dichalcogenides, making possible controls of spin and valley in these
2D materials. The spin-valley coupling at the valence band edges suppresses
spin and valley relaxation, as flip of each index alone is forbidden by the
valley contrasting spin splitting. Valley Hall and spin Hall effects coexist in
both electron-doped and hole-doped systems. Optical interband transitions have
frequency-dependent polarization selection rules which allow selective
photoexcitation of carriers with various combination of valley and spin
indices. Photo-induced spin Hall and valley Hall effects can generate long
lived spin and valley accumulations on sample boundaries. The physics discussed
here provides a route towards the integration of valleytronics and spintronics
in multi-valley materials with strong spin-orbit coupling and inversion
symmetry breaking.Comment: published versio
Spin-valley qubit in nanostructures of monolayer semiconductors: Optical control and hyperfine interaction
We investigate the optical control possibilities of spin-valley qubit carried
by single electrons localized in nanostructures of monolayer TMDs, including
small quantum dots formed by lateral heterojunction and charged impurities. The
quantum controls are discussed when the confinement induces valley
hybridization and when the valley hybridization is absent. We show that the
bulk valley and spin optical selection rules can be inherited in different
forms in the two scenarios, both of which allow the definition of spin-valley
qubit with desired optical controllability. We also investigate nuclear spin
induced decoherence and quantum control of electron-nuclear spin entanglement
via intervalley terms of the hyperfine interaction. Optically controlled
two-qubit operations in a single quantum dot are discussed.Comment: 17pages, 10 figure
Triply degenerate nodal line and tunable contracted-drumhead surface state in a tight-binding model
The study of topological semimetals has been extended to more general
topological nodal systems such as metamaterials and artificial periodic
structures. Among various nodal structures, triply degenerate nodal line (TNL)
is rare and hence lack of attention. In this work, we have proposed a simple
tight-binding model which hosts a topological non-trivial TNL. This TNL not
only has the drumhead surface states as usual nodal line systems, but also has
surface states which form a contracted-drumhead shape. And the shape and area
of this contracted-drumhead can be tuned by the hopping parameters of the
model. This provides an effective way to modulate surface states as well as
their density of states, which can be important in future applications of
topological nodal systems.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
- …