Back to Search Start Over

Evidence of indirect gap in monolayer WSe2

Authors :
Li Syuan Lu
Jing Kai Huang
Horng-Tay Jeng
Zhen-Yu Juang
Wen-Hao Chang
Yi-Chia Chou
Wei Ting Hsu
Dean Wang
Ming-Yang Li
Lain-Jong Li
Tay-Rong Chang
Source :
Nature Communications, Nature Communications, Vol 8, Iss 1, Pp 1-7 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group UK, 2017.

Abstract

Monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides, such as MoS2 and WSe2, have been known as direct gap semiconductors and emerged as new optically active materials for novel device applications. Here we reexamine their direct gap properties by investigating the strain effects on the photoluminescence of monolayer MoS2 and WSe2. Instead of applying stress, we investigate the strain effects by imaging the direct exciton populations in monolayer WSe2–MoS2 and MoSe2–WSe2 lateral heterojunctions with inherent strain inhomogeneity. We find that unstrained monolayer WSe2 is actually an indirect gap material, as manifested in the observed photoluminescence intensity–energy correlation, from which the difference between the direct and indirect optical gaps can be extracted by analyzing the exciton thermal populations. Our findings combined with the estimated exciton binding energy further indicate that monolayer WSe2 exhibits an indirect quasiparticle gap, which has to be reconsidered in further studies for its fundamental properties and device applications.<br />Monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides have so far been thought to be direct bandgap semiconductors. Here, the authors revisit this assumption and find that unstrained monolayer WSe2 is an indirect-gap material, as evidenced by the observed photoluminescence intensity-energy correlation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0d785fb85d49a03d1d7ea4360684eb04