TY - JOUR
T1 - Angle- and polarization-resolved luminescence from suspended and hexagonal boron nitride encapsulated MoSe2 monolayers
AU - Han, Bo
AU - Stephan, Sven
AU - Thompson, Joshua J.P.
AU - Esmann, Martin
AU - Anton-Solanas, Carlos
AU - Shan, Hangyong
AU - Kunte, Nils
AU - Brem, Samuel
AU - Tongay, Sefaattin
AU - Lienau, Christoph
AU - Watanabe, Kenji
AU - Taniguchi, Takashi
AU - Silies, Martin
AU - Malic, Ermin
AU - Schneider, Christian
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgment. B.H. and C.S. gratefully acknowledge funding by the DFG. J.T and E.M. acknowledge funding from the DFG, and the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (Graphene Flagship). S.S and M.S. thank the BMBF for a personal research grant “Photonic Transistors” in the NanoMatFutur program. M.E. acknowledges funding by the University of Oldenburg through a Carl-von-Ossietzky Young Researchers’ fellowship. S.T. acknowledges the research supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Sciences and Engineering, Applied Materials Inc. (crystallography), NSF. C.L. acknowledges funding by Volkswagen-Stiftung (SMART). K.W. and T.T. acknowledge support from JSPS.
Funding Information:
Funding. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) (SPP 2244, SCHN 1376 11-1, 14-1, SFB 1083); European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program (881603); University of Oldenburg; Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (BMBF) (NanoMatFutur FKZ: 13N13637); U.S. Department of Energy; Basic Energy Sciences; Division of Materials Sciences and Engineering (SC0020653); Applied Materials Inc.; National Science Foundation (DMR 2206987, CMMI-1933214, ECCS 2052527, DMR 2111812); Volkswagen-Stiftung (SMART); Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (KAKENHI) (19H05790, 20H00354, 21H05233).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Optica Publishing Group.
PY - 2022/10
Y1 - 2022/10
N2 - The polarized photoluminescence from atomically thin transition metal dichalcogenides is a frequently applied tool to scrutinize optical selection rules and valley physics, yet it is known to sensibly depend on a variety of internal and external material and sample properties. In this work, we apply combined angle- and polarization-resolved spectroscopy to explore the interplay of excitonic physics and phenomena arising from the commonly utilized encapsulation procedure on the optical properties of atomically thinMoSe2.We probe monolayers prepared in both suspended and encapsulated manners.We show that the hBN encapsulation significantly enhances the linear polarization of exciton photoluminescence emission at large emission angles. This degree of linear polarization of excitons can increase up to ∼17% in the hBN encapsulated samples. As we confirm by finite-difference time-domain simulations, it can be directly connected to the optical anisotropy of the hBN layers. In comparison, the linear polarization at finite exciton momenta is significantly reduced in a suspendedMoSe2 monolayer, and becomes notable only in cryogenic conditions. This phenomenon strongly suggests that the effect is rooted in the k-dependent anisotropic exchange coupling inherent in2Dexcitons.Our results have strong implications on further studies on valley contrasting selection rules and valley coherence phenomena using standard suspended and encapsulated samples.
AB - The polarized photoluminescence from atomically thin transition metal dichalcogenides is a frequently applied tool to scrutinize optical selection rules and valley physics, yet it is known to sensibly depend on a variety of internal and external material and sample properties. In this work, we apply combined angle- and polarization-resolved spectroscopy to explore the interplay of excitonic physics and phenomena arising from the commonly utilized encapsulation procedure on the optical properties of atomically thinMoSe2.We probe monolayers prepared in both suspended and encapsulated manners.We show that the hBN encapsulation significantly enhances the linear polarization of exciton photoluminescence emission at large emission angles. This degree of linear polarization of excitons can increase up to ∼17% in the hBN encapsulated samples. As we confirm by finite-difference time-domain simulations, it can be directly connected to the optical anisotropy of the hBN layers. In comparison, the linear polarization at finite exciton momenta is significantly reduced in a suspendedMoSe2 monolayer, and becomes notable only in cryogenic conditions. This phenomenon strongly suggests that the effect is rooted in the k-dependent anisotropic exchange coupling inherent in2Dexcitons.Our results have strong implications on further studies on valley contrasting selection rules and valley coherence phenomena using standard suspended and encapsulated samples.
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U2 - 10.1364/OPTICA.464533
DO - 10.1364/OPTICA.464533
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85141494826
VL - 9
SP - 1190
EP - 1196
JO - Optica
JF - Optica
SN - 2334-2536
IS - 10
ER -