60 research outputs found

    Breathing modes in few-layer MoTe2_2 activated by h-BN encapsulation

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    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 MoTe2_2. 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 SiO2_2/Si substrate. The shear mode is not affected by changing the MoTe2_2 environment. The emerged structure of breathing modes is ascribed to the apparent interaction between the MoTe2_2 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

    Probing and manipulating valley coherence of dark excitons in monolayer WSe2_2

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    Monolayers of semiconducting transition metal dichalcogenides are two-dimensional direct-gap systems which host tightly-bound excitons with an internal degree of freedom corresponding to the valley of the constituting carriers. Strong spin-orbit interaction and the resulting ordering of the spin-split subbands in the valence and conduction bands makes the lowest-lying excitons in WX2_2 (X~being S or Se) spin-forbidden and optically dark. With polarization-resolved photoluminescence experiments performed on a WSe2_2 monolayer encapsulated in a hexagonal boron nitride, we show how the intrinsic exchange interaction in combination with the applied in-plane and/or out-of-plane magnetic fields enables one to probe and manipulate the valley degree of freedom of the dark excitons.Comment: Manuscript: 6 pages, 3 figures; SM: 6 pages, 5 figure

    Fine structure of K\mathrm{K}-excitons in multilayers of transition metal dichalcogenides

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    Reflectance and magneto-reflectance experiments together with theoretical modelling based on the k⋅p\mathbf{k\cdot p} approach have been employed to study the evolution of direct bandgap excitons in MoS2_2 layers with a thickness ranging from mono- to trilayer. The extra excitonic resonances observed in MoS2_2 multilayers emerge as a result of the hybridization of Bloch states of each sub-layer due to the interlayer coupling. The properties of such excitons in bi- and trilayers are classified by the symmetry of corresponding crystals. The inter- and intralayer character of the reported excitonic resonances is fingerprinted with the magneto-optical measurements: the excitonic gg-factors of opposite sign and of different amplitude are revealed for these two types of resonances. The parameters describing the strength of the spin-orbit interaction are estimated for bi- and trilayer MoS2_2.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figure

    Experimental approval of the extended flat bands and gapped subbands in rhombohedral multilayer graphene

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    Graphene layers are known to stack in two stable configurations, namely ABA or ABC stacking, with drastically distinct electronic properties. Unlike the ABA stacking, little has been done to experimentally investigate the electronic properties of ABC graphene multilayers. Here, we report the first magneto optical study of a large ABC domain in a graphene multilayers flake, with ABC sequences exceeding 17 graphene sheets. The ABC-stacked multilayers can be fingerprinted with a characteristic electronic Raman scattering response, which persists even at room temperatures. Tracing the magnetic field evolution of the inter Landau level excitations from this domain gives strong evidence to the existence of a dispersionless electronic band near the Fermi level, characteristic of such stacking. Our findings present a simple yet powerful approach to probe ABC stacking in graphene multilayer flakes, where this highly degenerated band appears as an appealing candidate to host strongly correlated states.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
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