Characterizing and manipulating the charge state of individual defects in WSe2

ORAL

Abstract

Defect structures in tungsten diselenide (WSe2) are drawing increasing attention because they play a role in the optical response and in some cases give rise to single-photon emission, providing new platforms for the application in quantum information processing1-4. To date, however, the understanding of the nature and electronic structure of such structural defects in WSe2 atomic layers is still lacking5. Here we describe the characterization of individual point defects in WSe2 atomic layers using scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy. In bilayer WSe2 on graphene, we observe in-gap electronic states, and spatially dependent spectroscopy and dI/dV maps showed that the charge state of the defect can be manipulated. We also characterize other types of point defects in our measurements, including ones characterized by a very small energy bandgap (similar to that of a metallic phase of WSe26) and others which feature sharp electronic states near the valence band and a negative differential resistance (NDR), similar to that observed in single quantum states7,8. Finally, we propose a minimal single-electron transport model explaining these effects.

Presenters

  • Rui Zhang

    Argonne Natl Lab

Authors

  • Rui Zhang

    Argonne Natl Lab

  • Genevieve Clark

    Department of Physics, University of Washington, Materials Science and Engineering, University of Washington, Physics, and Materials Science and Engineering, Univ of Washington

  • Xiaodong Xu

    University of Washington, Univ of Washington, Physics, Univ of Washington, Department of Physics, University of Washington, Physics, University of Washington, Physics, and Materials Science and Engineering, Univ of Washington, Department of Physics, University of Washington - Seattle

  • Pierre Darancet

    Argonne Natl Lab, Argonne National Lab

  • Jeffrey Guest

    Argonne Natl Lab