18 research outputs found
Direct observation of spin-polarised bulk bands in an inversion-symmetric semiconductor
Methods to generate spin-polarised electronic states in non-magnetic solids
are strongly desired to enable all-electrical manipulation of electron spins
for new quantum devices. This is generally accepted to require breaking global
structural inversion symmetry. In contrast, here we present direct evidence
from spin- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy for a strong spin
polarisation of bulk states in the centrosymmetric transition-metal
dichalcogenide WSe. We show how this arises due to a lack of inversion
symmetry in constituent structural units of the bulk crystal where the
electronic states are localised, leading to enormous spin splittings up to
eV, with a spin texture that is strongly modulated in both real and
momentum space. As well as providing the first experimental evidence for a
recently-predicted `hidden' spin polarisation in inversion-symmetric materials,
our study sheds new light on a putative spin-valley coupling in
transition-metal dichalcogenides, of key importance for using these compounds
in proposed valleytronic devices.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Exchange-driven intravalley mixing of excitons in monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides
© 2018, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited. Monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) are promising two-dimensional (2D) semiconductors for application in optoelectronics. Their optical properties are dominated by two series of photo-excited exciton states—A (XA) and B (XB) 1,2 —that are derived from direct interband transitions near the band extrema. These exciton states have large binding energies and strong optical absorption 3–6 , and form an ideal system to investigate many-body effects in low dimensions. Because spin–orbit coupling causes a large splitting between bands of opposite spins, XA and XB are usually treated as spin-polarized Ising excitons, each arising from interactions within a specific set of states induced by interband transitions between pairs of either spin-up or spin-down bands (TA or TB). Here, by using monolayer MoS 2 as a prototypical system and solving the first-principles Bethe–Salpeter equations, we demonstrate a strong intravalley exchange interaction between TA and TB, indicating that XA and XB are mixed states instead of pure Ising excitons. Using 2D electronic spectroscopy, we observe that an optical excitation of the lower-energy TA induces a population of the higher-energy TB, manifesting the intravalley exchange interaction. This work elucidates the dynamics of exciton formation in monolayer TMDCs, and sheds light on many-body effects in 2D materials
Discovery of a new type of topological Weyl fermion semimetal state in MoxW1-xTe2
[[abstract]]The recent discovery of a Weyl semimetal in TaAs offers the first Weyl fermion observed in nature and dramatically broadens the classification of topological phases. However, in TaAs it has proven challenging to study the rich transport phenomena arising from emergent Weyl fermions. The series MoxW1−xTe2 are inversion-breaking, layered, tunable semimetals already under study as a promising platform for new electronics and recently proposed to host Type II, or strongly Lorentz-violating, Weyl fermions. Here we report the discovery of a Weyl semimetal in MoxW1−xTe2 at x=25%. We use pump-probe angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (pump-probe ARPES) to directly observe a topological Fermi arc above the Fermi level, demonstrating a Weyl semimetal. The excellent agreement with calculation suggests that MoxW1−xTe2 is a Type II Weyl semimetal. We also find that certain Weyl points are at the Fermi level, making MoxW1−xTe2 a promising platform for transport and optics experiments on Weyl semimetals.[[notice]]補正完