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Narrow-band high-lying excitons with negative-mass electrons in monolayer WSe2

Authors :
Steven G. Louie
John M. Lupton
Jaroslav Fabian
Alexey Chernikov
Nicola Paradiso
Bartomeu Monserrat
Bo Peng
Sebastian Bange
Jonas Zipfel
Jonas D. Ziegler
Kenji Watanabe
Kai-Qiang Lin
Christian Bäuml
Paulo E. Faria Junior
Christoph Strunk
Takashi Taniguchi
Diana Y. Qiu
Chin Shen Ong
Lin, Kai-Qiang [0000-0001-9609-749X]
Ong, Chin Shen [0000-0001-8747-1849]
Bange, Sebastian [0000-0002-5850-264X]
Peng, Bo [0000-0001-6406-663X]
Watanabe, Kenji [0000-0003-3701-8119]
Taniguchi, Takashi [0000-0002-1467-3105]
Monserrat, Bartomeu [0000-0002-4233-4071]
Fabian, Jaroslav [0000-0002-3009-4525]
Chernikov, Alexey [0000-0002-9213-2777]
Louie, Steven G [0000-0003-0622-0170]
Lupton, John M [0000-0002-7899-7598]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1-8 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2021.

Abstract

Monolayer transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) show a wealth of exciton physics. Here, we report the existence of a new excitonic species, the high-lying exciton (HX), in single-layer WSe2 with an energy of ~3.4 eV, almost twice the band-edge A-exciton energy, with a linewidth as narrow as 5.8 meV. The HX is populated through momentum-selective optical excitation in the K-valleys and is identified in upconverted photoluminescence (UPL) in the UV spectral region. Strong electron-phonon coupling results in a cascaded phonon progression with equidistant peaks in the luminescence spectrum, resolvable to ninth order. Ab initio GW-BSE calculations with full electron-hole correlations explain HX formation and unmask the admixture of upper conduction-band states to this complex many-body excitation. These calculations suggest that the HX is comprised of electrons of negative mass. The coincidence of such high-lying excitonic species at around twice the energy of band-edge excitons rationalizes the excitonic quantum-interference phenomenon recently discovered in optical second-harmonic generation (SHG) and explains the efficient Auger-like annihilation of band-edge excitons.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
12
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c8645175d43ca88ddf709150dd7cbcc0