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

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Kai Qiang Lin - , University of Regensburg (Author)
  • Chin Shen Ong - , University of California at Berkeley, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Author)
  • Sebastian Bange - , University of Regensburg (Author)
  • Paulo E. Faria Junior - , University of Regensburg (Author)
  • Bo Peng - , University of Cambridge (Author)
  • Jonas D. Ziegler - , University of Regensburg (Author)
  • Jonas Zipfel - , University of Regensburg (Author)
  • Christian Bäuml - , University of Regensburg (Author)
  • Nicola Paradiso - , University of Regensburg (Author)
  • Kenji Watanabe - , National Institute for Materials Science Tsukuba (Author)
  • Takashi Taniguchi - , National Institute for Materials Science Tsukuba (Author)
  • Christoph Strunk - , University of Regensburg (Author)
  • Bartomeu Monserrat - , University of Cambridge (Author)
  • Jaroslav Fabian - , University of Regensburg (Author)
  • Alexey Chernikov - , Chair of Ultrafast Microscopy and Photonics (ct.qmat), Clusters of Excellence ct.qmat: Complexity and Topology in Quantum Matter, University of Regensburg (Author)
  • Diana Y. Qiu - , University of California at Berkeley, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Yale University (Author)
  • Steven G. Louie - , University of California at Berkeley, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Author)
  • John M. Lupton - , University of Regensburg (Author)

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

Original languageEnglish
Article number5500
JournalNature communications
Volume12
Issue number1
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2021
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

PubMed 34535654