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Inhibited nonradiative decay at all exciton densities in monolayer semiconductors

Hyung‐Jin Kim, Shiekh Zia Uddin, Naoki Higashitarumizu, Eran Rabani, Ali Javey

2021Science108 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Most optoelectronic devices operate at high photocarrier densities, where all semiconductors suffer from enhanced nonradiative recombination. Nonradiative processes proportionately reduce photoluminescence (PL) quantum yield (QY), a performance metric that directly dictates the maximum device efficiency. Although transition metal dichalcogenide (TMDC) monolayers exhibit near-unity PL QY at low exciton densities, nonradiative exciton-exciton annihilation (EEA) enhanced by van-Hove singularity (VHS) rapidly degrades their PL QY at high exciton densities and limits their utility in practical applications. Here, by applying small mechanical strain (less than 1%), we circumvented VHS resonance and markedly suppressed EEA in monolayer TMDCs, resulting in near-unity PL QY at all exciton densities despite the presence of a high native defect density. Our findings can enable light-emitting devices that retain high efficiency at all brightness levels.

Topics & Concepts

ExcitonMonolayerPhotoluminescenceSemiconductorOptoelectronicsQuantum yieldMaterials scienceAnnihilationWide-bandgap semiconductorCondensed matter physicsPhysicsNanotechnologyFluorescenceOpticsParticle physicsPerovskite Materials and Applications2D Materials and ApplicationsLuminescence and Fluorescent Materials
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