Theory of Optical Absorption by Interlayer Excitons in Transition Metal Dichalcogenide Heterobilayers
ORAL
Abstract
We present a theory of optical absorption by interlayer excitons in a heterobilayer formed from transition metal dichalcogenides. The theory accounts for the presence of small relative rotations that produce a momentum shift between electron and hole bands located in different layers, and a moire pattern in real space. Because of the momentum shift, the optically active interlayer excitons are located at the moire Brillouin zone's corners, instead of at its center, and would have elliptical optical selection rules if the individual layers were translationally invariant. We show that the exciton moire potential energy restores circular optical selection rules by coupling excitons with different center of mass momenta. A variety of interlayer excitons with both senses of circular optical activity, and energies that are tunable by twist angle, are present at each valley. The lowest energy exciton states are generally localized near the exciton potential energy minima. We discuss the possibility of using the moire pattern to achieve scalable two-dimensional arrays of nearly identical quantum dots.
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Presenters
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Fengcheng Wu
Argonne National Laboratory, Department of Physics, Univerisity of Texas at Austin, Argonne National Lab
Authors
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Fengcheng Wu
Argonne National Laboratory, Department of Physics, Univerisity of Texas at Austin, Argonne National Lab
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Timothy Lovorn
The University of Texas at Austin
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Allan MacDonald
Physics department, University of Texas at Austin, Physics, University of Texas, Austin, Department of Physics, The University of Texas at Austin, Physics , Univ of Texas, Austin, Univ of Texas at Austin, Physics, The University of Texas at Austin, Department of Physics, Univerisity of Texas at Austin, The University of Texas at Austin, University of Texas