Engineering of the point defect in WSe2: a strong spin splitting of the localized defect state

ORAL

Abstract

Due to the semiconductor nature of atomically thin transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs), it has soon been recognized that defects can play important roles in the electron transport and the optical transition in TMDs. In particular, it was demonstrated recently that the point defect (e.g. W vacancy) in WSe2 can behave as single quantum emitters, which are at the heart of the quantum optics and photonic quantum-information technologies. One of the essential steps towards the realistic application of the point defects in monolayer semiconductor is to tune the localized electronic structure trough the defect engineering. Here, we report a single potassium atom decoration of the W vacancy in monolayer WSe2. Combing the scanning microscope/spectroscopy and the first principle calculation, we unveiled the atomic and electronic structures of the K/W-vac defect. We show that the K atom behaves as a surprising p-type dopant that shifts the acceptor states upwards, and narrows the local gap by about 0.2 eV compared with the intrinsic W-vac. Most interestingly, the symmetry breaking by the K atom leads to significant spin-orbit coupling splits of the localized defect states (> 100 meV). A local magnetic moment is predicted to form when the charging effect from the substrate was excluded.

Presenters

  • Chendong Zhang

    Wuhan University

Authors

  • Chendong Zhang

    Wuhan University

  • Cong Wang

    Renmin University of China

  • Feng Yang

    Renmin University of China

  • Ming-Yang Li

    Academia Sinica, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, Research Center for Applied Sciences, Academia Sinica

  • Lain-Jong Li

    King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, KAUST, Physical Sciences and Engineering Division, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

  • Wang Yao

    Department of Physics, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong University, University of Hong Kong, The University of Hong Kong, Department of Physics and Center of Theoretical and Computational Physics, University of Hong Kong

  • Wei Ji

    Renmin University of China, Department of Physics, Renmin University of China

  • Chih-Kang Shih

    the University of Texas at Austin, Physics, University of Texas at Austin, Physics, Univ of Texas, Austin, Department of Physics, Univ of Texas, Austin, Physics, UT Austin, Univ of Texas, Austin