Electrically tunable dipolar interactions between layer-hybridized excitons
Journal article, 2023

Transition-metal dichalcogenide bilayers exhibit a rich exciton landscape including layer-hybridized excitons, i.e. excitons which are of partly intra- and interlayer nature. In this work, we study hybrid exciton-exciton interactions in naturally stacked WSe2 homobilayers. In these materials, the exciton landscape is electrically tunable such that the low-energy states can be rendered more or less interlayer-like depending on the strength of the external electric field. Based on a microscopic and material-specific many-particle theory, we reveal two intriguing interaction regimes: a low-dipole regime at small electric fields and a high-dipole regime at larger fields, involving interactions between hybrid excitons with a substantially different intra- and interlayer composition in the two regimes. While the low-dipole regime is characterized by weak inter-excitonic interactions between intralayer-like excitons, the high-dipole regime involves mostly interlayer-like excitons which display a strong dipole-dipole repulsion and give rise to large spectral blue-shifts and a highly anomalous diffusion. Overall, our microscopic study sheds light on the remarkable electrical tunability of hybrid exciton-exciton interactions in atomically thin semiconductors and can guide future experimental studies in this growing field of research.

Author

Daniel Erkensten

Chalmers, Physics, Condensed Matter and Materials Theory

Samuel Brem

Philipps University Marburg

Raul Perea Causin

Chalmers, Physics, Condensed Matter and Materials Theory

Joakim Hagel

Chalmers, Physics, Condensed Matter and Materials Theory

Fedele Tagarelli

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL)

Edoardo Lopriore

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL)

A. Kis

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL)

Ermin Malic

Philipps University Marburg

Chalmers, Physics, Condensed Matter and Materials Theory

Nanoscale

2040-3364 (ISSN) 20403372 (eISSN)

Vol. 15 26 11064-11071

Graphene Core Project 3 (Graphene Flagship)

European Commission (EC) (EC/H2020/881603), 2020-04-01 -- 2023-03-31.

Subject Categories

Atom and Molecular Physics and Optics

Condensed Matter Physics

DOI

10.1039/d3nr01049j

More information

Latest update

3/7/2024 9