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Broken mirror symmetry in excitonic response of reconstructed domains in twisted MoSe$_2$/MoSe$_2$ bilayers

Authors :
Sung, Jiho
Zhou, You
Scuri, Giovanni
Zólyomi, Viktor
Andersen, Trond I.
Yoo, Hyobin
Wild, Dominik S.
Joe, Andrew Y.
Gelly, Ryan J.
Heo, Hoseok
Bérubé, Damien
Valdivia, Andrés M. Mier
Taniguchi, Takashi
Watanabe, Kenji
Lukin, Mikhail D.
Kim, Philip
Fal'ko, Vladimir I.
Park, Hongkun
Source :
Nature Nanotechnology 2020
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Structural engineering of van der Waals heterostructures via stacking and twisting has recently been used to create moir\'e superlattices, enabling the realization of new optical and electronic properties in solid-state systems. In particular, moir\'e lattices in twisted bilayers of transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) have been shown to lead to exciton trapping, host Mott insulating and superconducting states, and act as unique Hubbard systems whose correlated electronic states can be detected and manipulated optically. Structurally, these twisted heterostructures also feature atomic reconstruction and domain formation. Unfortunately, due to the nanoscale sizes (~10 nm) of typical moir\'e domains, the effects of atomic reconstruction on the electronic and excitonic properties of these heterostructures could not be investigated systematically and have often been ignored. Here, we use near-0$^o$ twist angle MoSe$_2$/MoSe$_2$ bilayers with large rhombohedral AB/BA domains to directly probe excitonic properties of individual domains with far-field optics. We show that this system features broken mirror/inversion symmetry, with the AB and BA domains supporting interlayer excitons with out-of-plane (z) electric dipole moments in opposite directions. The dipole orientation of ground-state $\Gamma$-K interlayer excitons (X$_{I,1}$) can be flipped with electric fields, while higher-energy K-K interlayer excitons (X$_{I,2}$) undergo field-asymmetric hybridization with intralayer K-K excitons (X$_0$). Our study reveals the profound impacts of crystal symmetry on TMD excitons and points to new avenues for realizing topologically nontrivial systems, exotic metasurfaces, collective excitonic phases, and quantum emitter arrays via domain-pattern engineering.<br />Comment: 29 pages, 4 figures in main text, 6 figures in supplementary information

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Nature Nanotechnology 2020
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2001.01157
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41565-020-0728-z