The present technology generally relates to the area of Rydberg atoms, and more particularly, to monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides configured to reveal giant valley-polarized Rydberg excitons.
The Rydberg atom, with its large size of hundreds of nanometers, can be easily controlled and probed with light. As a result, the Rydberg atom can be used to generate artificial molecules to study molecular dynamics. The giant size of Rydberg atoms also results in an enhanced interaction that leads to large nonlinearity and an exciton Coulomb blockade, which can be utilized for quantum information processing and quantum simulation. Despite the significant experimental progress for creating a Rydberg atom in optical traps, its analogue in a solid-state system is still highly desirable for better integration into modern electronic technology. The exciton, a ubiquitous quasiparticle in optically excited semiconductors, consists of a negatively charged electron and a positively charged hole bound together through a Coulomb interaction. In bulk semiconductors, excitons would also have Rydberg series like the hydrogen atom, which has been identified by the serial absorption peaks below the bandgap with energy spacing matching the Rydberg description
where Eb is the binding energy, Ry is the Rydberg constant, and n is the principal quantum number. For large principal number n, the corresponding Rydberg exciton would have a large radius extension and thus strongly enhanced exciton-exciton interaction, which is critical for realizing the large optical nonlinearity needed for quantum optoelectronics. One such example is the Rydberg blockade that can be utilized for quantum computing and quantum sensing, in which the existence of a large size Rydberg exciton will exclude the possibility of another Rydberg exciton nearby. The Rydberg exciton blockade has been shown for an n=25 exciton found in the crystal of copper oxide, which has a corresponding Bohr radius of 1.04 μm.
The ordered array of Rydberg excitons can be utilized as a quantum simulator and for quantum computing as well. However, generating such an ordered array in a bulk semiconductor is extremely challenging, if feasible at all. The emergence of the monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (“TMDC”) provides a promising platform to address the challenge. The strongly enhanced Coulomb interaction in two dimensions leads to a robust exciton with a large binding energy, which renders the highly excited stated of the exciton possible. The two-dimensional (“2D”) nature of the TMDCs allows them to be patterned with periodic potential to form an ordered array of Rydberg excitons. Also, the valley degrees of freedom of the exciton brings additional control of the Rydberg exciton. Nevertheless, the existence of a giant Rydberg exciton with a size comparable to the optical wavelength remains elusive. So far, only an excited exciton state up to 5s has been revealed in TMDCs, which requires an extremely strong magnetic field (˜91 T) and is still too small for convenient optical readout.
Thus, a need exists for a TMDC having higher-order Rydberg excitons that addressed the problems described above.
According to an embodiment of the present technology, a transition metal dichalcogenides device is provided. The device includes a substrate, a bottom layer of boron nitride, a tungsten diselenide monolayer positioned on the bottom layer of boron nitride, a top layer of boron nitride positioned on the tungsten diselenide monolayer such that the bottom layer of boron nitride and the top layer of boron nitride at least partially encapsulate the tungsten diselenide monolayer, a source electrode positioned on the substrate, a drain electrode positioned on the substrate, and a top gate electrode positioned on the top layer of boron nitride.
In some embodiments, the source electrode and the drain electrode each include gold and few-layer graphene.
In some embodiments, the few-layer graphene is positioned between the bottom layer of boron nitride and the top layer of boron nitride and partially on top of the tungsten diselenide monolayer.
In some embodiments, the top gate electrode includes gold and few-layer graphene.
In some embodiments, at least one of the bottom layer of boron nitride and the top layer of boron nitride includes hexagonal few-layer boron nitride.
In some embodiments, the substrate includes at least one of a silicon dioxide layer and a silicon layer.
In some embodiments, the tungsten diselenide monolayer is configured to reveal excitons when at least one of a K valley and a K′ valley of the tungsten diselenide monolayer is exposed to excitation photon energy and an external magnetic field.
In some embodiments, the excitons are giant valley-polarized Rydberg excitons in excited states ranging from 2s to 11s when the external magnetic field is in the range of about −17 T to about 17 T.
According to another embodiment of the present technology, a system for revealing excitons in a transition metal dichalcogenides is provided. The system includes a broadband light source configured to emit excitation photon energy, a tunable filter configured to filter to excitation photon energy to a predetermined wavelength bandwidth, a linear polarizer configured to linearly polarize the filtered excitation photon energy, a quarter waveplate configured to convert the linearly polarized excitation photon energy into circularly polarized excitation photon energy, and a focusing element configured to focus the circularly polarized excitation photon energy to excite the transition metal dichalcogenides positioned on a piezo stage microscope. An external magnetic field is applied to the transition metal dichalcogenides when it is exposed to the focused circularly polarized excitation photon energy.
In some embodiments, the system includes a mechanical chopper positioned between the linear polarizer and the quarter waveplate, and a lock-in amplifier configured to measure a photocurrent modulated by the mechanical chopper.
In some embodiments, the system includes a half waveplate positioned between the linear polarizer and the quarter waveplate.
In some embodiments, the broadband light source includes a supercontinuum laser.
In some embodiments, the focusing element includes a 50× objective configured to focus the circularly polarized excitation photon energy to a spot size of about 2 μm.
In some embodiments, the predetermined wavelength bandwidth is about 1 nm.
In some embodiments, the transition metal dichalcogenides includes a substrate, a bottom layer of boron nitride, a tungsten diselenide monolayer positioned on the bottom layer of boron nitride, a top layer of boron nitride positioned on the tungsten diselenide monolayer such that the bottom layer of boron nitride and the top layer of boron nitride at least partially encapsulate the tungsten diselenide monolayer, a source electrode positioned on the substrate, a drain electrode positioned on the substrate, and a top gate electrode positioned on the top layer of boron nitride.
In some embodiments, the tungsten diselenide monolayer is configured to reveal excitons when at least one of a K valley and a K′ valley of the tungsten diselenide monolayer is exposed to the focused circularly polarized excitation photon energy and the external magnetic field.
In some embodiments, the excitons are giant valley-polarized Rydberg excitons in excited states ranging from 2s to 11s when the external magnetic field is in the range of about −17 T to about 17 T.
According to yet another embodiment of the present technology, a method of revealing excitons in a transition metal dichalcogenides is provided. The method includes the steps of providing the transition metal dichalcogenides, the transition metal dichalcogenides including a substrate, a bottom layer of boron nitride, a tungsten diselenide monolayer positioned on the bottom layer of boron nitride, a top layer of boron nitride positioned on the tungsten diselenide monolayer such that the bottom layer of boron nitride and the top layer of boron nitride at least partially encapsulate the tungsten diselenide monolayer, a source electrode positioned on the substrate, a drain electrode positioned on the substrate, and a top gate electrode positioned on the top layer of boron nitride; exposing the transition metal dichalcogenides to an external magnetic field; emitting excitation photon energy from a broadband light source; filtering, via a tunable filter, the excitation photon energy to a predetermined wavelength bandwidth; linearly polarizing, via a linear polarizer, the filtered excitation photon energy; converting, via a quarter waveplate, the linearly polarized excitation photon energy to circularly polarized excitation photon energy; and focusing, via a 50× objective, the circularly polarized excitation photon energy to a spot size of about 2 μm onto the tungsten diselenide monolayer of the transition metal dichalcogenides.
In some embodiments, the tungsten diselenide monolayer is configured to reveal excitons when at least one of a K valley and a K′ valley of the tungsten diselenide monolayer is exposed to the focused circularly polarized excitation photon energy and the external magnetic field.
In some embodiments, the excitons are giant valley-polarized Rydberg excitons in excited states ranging from 2s to 11s when the external magnetic field is in the range of about −17 T to about 17 T.
Further objects, aspects, features, and embodiments of the present technology will be apparent from the drawing figures and below description.
Accordingly, embodiments of the present technology are directed to a monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (“TMDC”) device and helicity-resolved magneto-photocurrent spectroscopy systems and methods to reveal the exciton excited states up to 11s in the TMDC under an ˜17 T magnetic field. Under an out-of-plane magnetic field, the energy degeneracy of the K and K′ valleys is lifted, which can be exploited to improve the signal-to-noise ratio further. The extensive information about the size and energy of the Rydberg series of the exciton, from is to 11s, is in excellent agreement with numerical simulations using the non-hydrogenic screened Keldysh potential. In some embodiments, being able to resolve the highly excited state up to 11s permits the accurate determination of the exciton binding energy of the A exciton (1s) in WSe2 to be 168.6 meV. Notably, in some embodiments, the size of the 11s exciton is determined to be 214 nm, orders of magnitude larger than that of the ground-state exciton (1.75 nm for the 1s state, see Table 1 below) and comparable to the wavelength of light, especially with the consideration of the dielectric environment. The unveiling of the valley-polarized giant Rydberg excitons in the TMDCs of the present technology enables further investigation of the enhanced exciton-exciton interactions. In addition, the two orders of magnitude difference of the binding energy between different Rydberg excitons allows the investigation of the interplay between the Coulomb interaction and Landau quantization, which transitions from a low- to high-magnetic-field limit for increasing n. In some embodiments, the high-magnetic-field limit can be reached at a reasonable magnetic field of ˜10 T for n≥9, owing to the small binding energy of the high-order Rydberg exciton (Table 1).
In some embodiments, the conductance (i.e. the source-drain current) of the TMDC 10, without light illumination, was measured as a function of the top gate voltage Vtg (with an applied bias of 100 mV) at both room temperature (curve labeled 30) and 4.2 K (curve labeled 32), as shown in
Photocurrent is a sensitive probe of the absorption information on a 2D semiconductor with a large signal-to-noise ratio, due to the large photocurrent response and negligible dark current. Some embodiments investigate the photocurrent response from the TMDC 10 as a function of the excitation photon energy. Some embodiments choose light excitation with a particular helicity (σ+) to selectively excite a particular valley (K). As shown in
In some embodiments, optical excitation with different helicities are used to access the photocurrent spectra of K and K′ valleys, preferably focusing on the exciton excited state starting from 2s. Some embodiments normalize the photocurrent with the excitation laser power, and the normalized photoresponsivity spectra is further background-subtracted, as shown in
Ens=Ens0+1/2σgμBB+ΔEdm (1)
where Ens0 is the energy of the ns state at zero magnetic field, σ is the valley index that is +1 for the K valley and −1 for the K′ valley, μB is the value of Bohr magnetic, and g is the Landé g-factor. The third term ΔEdm is the diamagnetic shift. In the low-magnetic-field limit, where the cyclotron resonance energy
is much smaller than the exciton binding energy, the diamagnetic shift ΔEdm is expressed as
with mr being the reduced mass of exciton and r2ns being the square of the expected ns exciton radius. For ground-state 1s, as the exciton is strongly bounded, r2ls is small, and the energy shift ΔE=Ens−Ens0 is dominated by the valley-Zeeman term that linearly depends on the magnetic field. In some embodiments, even for the 2s state, the linear term is still more significant, as shown in
In some embodiments, the Landau levels (“LL”) will form in the extremely high-magnetic-field limit. If
is much larger than the binding energy, and the absorption is dominated by the inter-LL transitions, which is valley-selective due to the nontrivial Berry phase. The diamagnetic shift term ΔEdm will be
where n is the number of allowed inter-LL transitions for each valley. As a result, the energy shift ΔE=Ens−Ens0 will again be a linear function of the magnetic field in the high-field limit. In some embodiments, as the binding energy of the high-order excited state decreases, the high-field limit is easier to achieve for the ns state when n>>1, as discussed below regarding data from the high-order excited state.
Equation 1 allows users to quantitatively analyze the experimental data. From the photocurrent spectra of the K and K′ valleys (
Also from Equation 1, the average energy of the resonance peaks from the photocurrent spectra of the K and K′ valleys, Ēns=½(EK+EK′), can be expressed as Ens+ΔEdm noting that ΔEdm is an even function of the magnetic field, and the valley-Zeeman shift from K or K′ valleys is an odd function of the magnetic field that cancels each other. As a result, the shift of the average resonance energy for ns, ΔĒns=Ēns−Ēns0, will only be determined by the diamagnetic shift, and the experimentally extracted value is shown as the solid dots in
In some embodiments, the data represents a scenario where the strong Coulomb interaction and Landau quantization coexist, which gives rise to the intriguing question of the exciton behavior in a strong quantizing magnetic field. Since neither the Coulomb interaction nor the Landau quantization energy can be treated as a perturbation, an analytical solution is not shown. Instead, embodiments numerally calculate average resonance shift ΔĒns as a function of the magnetic field. Some embodiments adopt a non-hydrogenic screened Keldysh potential, which is given by
where ε=(εtop+εbottom)/2 is the averaged relative dielectric constant of the surroundings, ε0 is the vacuum permittivity, and r0=2πX2D is the screening length with X2D being the 2D polarizability. H0 and Y0 are the Struve and Bessel functions of the second kind, respectively. The numerically calculated ΔĒns as a function of the magnetic field is, in some embodiments, best fitted with the experimental data with the fitting parameters ε=4.3, r0=4.5 nm, and mr=0.2m0, where m0 is the free electron mass in a vacuum (see Supplemental Information 5 below).
In some embodiments, even high-order exciton excited states (n>8) are also vaguely visible in the color plots (
where PCK (PCK′) is the photocurrent response from the K (K′) valley. If the separation of the resonances from the K and K′ valleys is much larger than the line width of the resonance, the photocurrent valley polarization, PPC, will have an extreme value of 50% for the K valley resonance and −50% valley resonance. In some embodiments, the line width broadens for the higher-order excited states, and the peak value of the photocurrent valley polarization becomes smaller, but the positive or negative peak is still useful to track the shift of the resonance of the K and K′ valleys, as discussed below.
at 15 T (˜8.69 meV), which suggests it is in the high-magnetic-field limit. As discussed above, in the high-field limit, the average energy shift will be a linear function of the B field, with the slope asymptotically approaching
Therefore, some embodiments obtain the reduced mass of the exciton solely from experimental data. Fitting all Rydberg exciton data, starting from 9s, reaches a saturating reduced mass of 0.2m0 (as discussed below), that is in excellent agreement with fitting result mentioned above, confirming that it is in the high-field limit for n≥9 excitons even with a magnetic field as low as ˜10 T.
Therefore, the TMDC 10 according to exemplary embodiments of the present technology provides an intriguing platform to investigate the different interplay between the Coulomb interaction and Landau quantization. By tuning the principal number n of Rydberg excitons, some embodiments smoothly transition from a low to high-magnetic-field limit with a reasonable magnetic field between about 10 to about 17 T, which is drastically advantageous for detailed investigations considering the extremely strong magnetic field (˜91 T) needed previously.
In some embodiments, the TMDC 10 was fabricated by the dry transfer technique. First, the monolayer WSe2 12, few-layer graphene 20 and few-layer BN 14 were exfoliated onto SiO2/Si substrate 15. A layer of 1 μm thick PPC on the transparent elastomer stamp (PDMS, polydimethylsiloxane) was inverted and attached to the transfer stage to pick up the few-layer BN flake. This process was repeated to pick up the monolayer WSe2, few-layer graphene, and another few-layer BN in sequence. The prepared stack was placed onto a pair of pre-patterned gold (“Au”) electrodes and removed the PPC by heating up to 90° C. The PPC residue was removed by chloroform to leave the BN/WSe2/Graphene/BN stack on the substrate. Finally, another few-layer graphene was added onto the top BN as the top gate electrode, using the top BN flake as the gate dielectric layer.
In some embodiments, the photocurrent spectrum system 100 is shown in
In some embodiments, magneto-photocurrent was performed at a higher magnetic field up to 31 T. The results are shown in
In some embodiments, the determination of the average resonance energies for each Rydberg exciton in
In some embodiments, to solve the 2D magnetoexciton problem, the Zeeman shift of the bands are ignored, and the exciton effective-mass approximation method is adopted. The Hamiltonian for an electron and a hole in WSe2 in a perpendicular magnetic field is given by
Some embodiments use the symmetric gauge Ae(h)=B({circumflex over (z)}×re(h))/2. The Hamiltonian of the relative motion (exciton) is given by
where r=re−rh is the relative coordinate and mr is the reduced mass. While there is no analytical solution for this problem, the eigenstates and eigenenergy can be obtained numerically by expanding the wavelength
m=0, ±1, ±2, . . . is the quantum number of angular momentum, knm is the nth zero point of the first kind of Bessel functions Jm(x), Nn,m=√{square root over (π)}RJm+1(knm), where R is the radial cutoff with the boundary condition Φ(R)=0. The angular momentum {circumflex over (L)}z is conserved and m is a good number. Therefore, the Hamiltonian is blocked diagonalized labeled by the angular momentum. Some embodiments are only interested in the s states, i.e., m=0. The eigenvalue equation is written as
The potential matrix elements
where
and the Coulomb potential is the non-hydrogenic Keldysh potential
where
is the averaged relative dielectric constant of surrounding, r0=2πχ2D is the screening length and χ2D is the 2D polarizability. H0 and Y0 are the Struve and Bessel functions of the second kind, respectively.
In the calculation, ε, mr, and r0 are three material parameters. In some embodiments, for each set of parameters, the energy vs magnetic field curve for 1s to 11s excited states are calculated. Then, the whole parameter space is searched to minimize the total error between the calculation and experiment. Some embodiments adopted 1200 basis functions with the radial cutoff R=500 nm. Then, some embodiments, determined that ε=4.3, r0=4.5 nm, and mr=0.2m0 are the best fitting parameters.
In 2D materials, the magnetic length is usually far larger than the Bohr radius (exciton size) due to the reduced screening effect when the magnetic field is not strong. Then the magnetic field term
can be regarded as a perturbation term. The energy of Rydberg states will acquire a diamagnetic shift in the presence of magnetic field, i.e.,
Some embodiments define rns=.
In some embodiments, the supercontinuum laser output was measured by a photodetector, as shown in
As the laser spot drifts for different magnetic fields, the baseline of the photocurrent spectroscopy fluctuates. To better resolve the excited exciton state peak, some embodiments subtract the baseline of each photocurrent spectrum. In some embodiments, 10 points from the interval 1.82 to 1.84 and 1.9 to 2.0 eV were chosen to generate a baseline with a B-spline interpolation method.
As discussed above, in the high magnetic field limit in some embodiments, the average resonance energy shift will be a linear function of the B field, with the slope asymptotically approaching
Thus, a linear fitting of the average energy of excited states from experimental data was performed to extract the reduced mass mr. From the calculation, the slope of diamagnetic shift ΔEdm will increase gradually and converge to
thus obtaining an upper bound of the effective mass. The results are shown in
From the calculation, the energy difference of adjacent excited states at the same magnetic field will decrease to
gradually as the magnetic field increases. An upper bound of the effective mass is obtained, in some embodiments, by assuming the high magnetic field approximation. Results are shown in
In some embodiments, the photocurrent spectra under different top gate voltages were measured. The excited states only appear in the intrinsic region, as shown in
Although the technology has been described and illustrated with respect to exemplary embodiments thereof, it should be understood by those skilled in the art that the foregoing and various other changes, omissions, and additions may be made therein and thereto, without parting from the spirit and scope of the present technology.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 63/154,876, filed Mar. 1, 2021, which is incorporated by reference as if disclosed herein in its entirety.
The present invention was made with government support under Grant No. FA9550-18-1-0312 awarded by the United States Air Force Office of Scientific Research. The government has certain rights in the invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20190288160 | Atature | Sep 2019 | A1 |
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20220276325 A1 | Sep 2022 | US |
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63154876 | Mar 2021 | US |