The development of semiconductor optoelectronic devices is moving toward low
power consumption and miniaturization, especially for high-efficiency quantum
emitters. However, most of these quantum sources work at low carrier density
region, where the Shockley-Read-Hall recombination may dominant and seriously
reduce the emission efficiency. In order to diminish the affection of carrier
trapping and sustain a strong photoluminescence emission under low power
pumping condition, we investigated on the influence of Suspending to
monolayered tungsten diselenide, novel two-dimensional quantum material. Not
only the PL intensity, but also the fundamental photoluminescence quantum yield
has exhibited a huge, order-scale enhancement through suspending, even
surprisingly, we found the PLQY improvement revealed far significantly under
small pumping power and came out an exponential increase tendency toward even
lower carrier density region. With its strong excitonic effect, suspended WSe_2
offers a solution to reduce carrier trapping and participate in non-radiative
processes. Moreover, in the low-power range where SRH recombination dominates,
suspended WSe_2 exhibited remarkably higher percentage of excitonic radiation
compared to contacted WSe_2. Herein, we quantitatively demonstrate the
significance of suspended WSe_2 monolayer at low carrier density region,
highlighting its potential for developing compact, low-power quantum emitters
in the future