7 research outputs found

    Probing the local nature of excitons and plasmons in few-layer MoS₂

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    Excitons and plasmons are the two most fundamental types of collective electronic excitations occurring in solids. Traditionally, they have been studied separately using bulk techniques that probe their average energetic structure over large spatial regions. However, as the dimensions of materials and devices continue to shrink, it becomes crucial to understand how these excitations depend on local variations in the crystal- and chemical structure on the atomic scale. Here, we use monochromated low-loss scanning-transmission-electron-microscopy electron-energy-loss spectroscopy, providing the best simultaneous energy and spatial resolution achieved to-date to unravel the full set of electronic excitations in few-layer MoS₂ nanosheets over a wide energy range. Using first-principles, many-body calculations we confirm the excitonic nature of the peaks at ~ 2 and ~ 3 eV in the experimental electron-energy-loss spectrum and the plasmonic nature of higher energy-loss peaks. We also rationalise the non-trivial dependence of the electron-energy-loss spectrum on beam and sample geometry such as the number of atomic layers and distance to steps and edges. Moreover, we show that the excitonic features are dominated by the long wavelength (q = 0) components of the probing field, while the plasmonic features are sensitive to a much broader range of q-vectors, indicating a qualitative difference in the spatial character of the two types of collective excitations. Our work provides a template protocol for mapping the local nature of electronic excitations that open new possibilities for studying photo-absorption and energy transfer processes on a nanometer scale

    A path to practical Solar Pumped Lasers via Radiative Energy Transfer

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    The optical conversion of incoherent solar radiation into a bright, coherent laser beam enables the application of nonlinear optics to solar energy conversion and storage. Here, we present an architecture for solar pumped lasers that uses a luminescent solar concentrator to decouple the conventional trade-off between solar absorption efficiency and the mode volume of the optical gain material. We report a 750-μm-thick Nd[superscript 3+]-doped YAG planar waveguide sensitized by a luminescent CdSe/CdZnS (core/shell) colloidal nanocrystal, yielding a peak cascade energy transfer of 14%, a broad spectral response in the visible portion of the solar spectrum, and an equivalent quasi-CW solar lasing threshold of 23 W-cm[superscript −2], or approximately 230 suns. The efficient coupling of incoherent, spectrally broad sunlight in small gain volumes should allow the generation of coherent laser light from intensities of less than 100 suns.United States. Dept. of DefenseUnited States. Air Force Office of Scientific ResearchUnited States. Dept. of Energy. Office of Basic Energy Sciences (DE-SC0001088)MIT Masdar Program (02/MI/MI/CP/11/07633/GEN/G/00)American Society for Engineering Education. National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowship (32 CFR 168a, FA9550-11-C-0028)Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies (W911NF-13-D-0001
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