Controlled interlayer exciton ionization in an electrostatic trap in atomically thin heterostructures
Andrew Y. Joe, Andrés M. Mier Valdivia, Luis A. Jauregui, Kateryna Pistunova, Dapeng Ding, You Zhou, Giovanni Scuri, Kristiaan De Greve, Andrey Sushko, Bumho Kim, Takashi Taniguchi, Kenji Watanabe, James Hone, Mikhail D. Lukin, Hongkun Park, Philip Kim
Abstract
Atomically thin semiconductor heterostructures provide a two-dimensional (2D) device platform for creating high densities of cold, controllable excitons. Interlayer excitons (IEs), bound electrons and holes localized to separate 2D quantum well layers, have permanent out-of-plane dipole moments and long lifetimes, allowing their spatial distribution to be tuned on demand. Here, we employ electrostatic gates to trap IEs and control their density. By electrically modulating the IE Stark shift, electron-hole pair concentrations above 2 × 1012 cm−2 can be achieved. At this high IE density, we observe an exponentially increasing linewidth broadening indicative of an IE ionization transition, independent of the trap depth. This runaway threshold remains constant at low temperatures, but increases above 20 K, consistent with the quantum dissociation of a degenerate IE gas. Our demonstration of the IE ionization in a tunable electrostatic trap represents an important step towards the realization of dipolar exciton condensates in solid-state optoelectronic devices. Here, the authors use electrostatic gates to trap interlayer excitons (IE) in MoSe2/WSe2 heterobilayers. They observe an exponential broadening of the IE emission linewidth that signals the IE ionization threshold.