Solving the Mystery of B-Peak Emission in Monolayer Transition Metal Dichalcogenides
ORAL
Abstract
We survey a large number of monolayer TMDs to better understand the conditions responsible for various emission characteristics that have been reported in literature. We find that the intensities for both A- and B-peak emission vary widely as a result of sample-to-sample variations. However, a measurable B-peak intensity is evident in all samples. There is a clear linear relationship between the two peak intensities. The emission from the dominant A-peak is commonly several orders of magnitude higher than B-peak emission, resulting in B/A-intensity ratios well below 1%. Yet, as the A-peak intensity decreases, the ratio of B/A monotonically increases, and we observe a B/A ratio up to 30% in monolayer MoS2. The A-excitonic emission is further quenched when MoS2 is incorporated into an MoS2/MoSe2 heterostructure, where we observe comparable A- and B-peak intensities. We attribute these variations to differences in exciton recombination times, allowing us to clarify contradictory reports regarding the feasibility and significance of B-peak emission.
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Presenters
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Kathleen McCreary
Naval Research Laboratory
Authors
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Kathleen McCreary
Naval Research Laboratory
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Aubrey Hanbicki
U.S. Naval Research Lab, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Naval Research Laboratory
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Saujan Sivaram
Material Science & Technology, Naval Research Labs, U.S. Naval Research Lab, Naval Research Laboratory, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Materials Science and Technology Directorate, Naval Research Lab
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Berend Jonker
U.S. Naval Research Lab, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Materials Science and Technology Division, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Naval Research Laboratory, Materials Science and Technology Directorate, Naval Research Lab, Naval Research laboratory