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Direct Imaging of Carrier Funneling in a Dielectric Engineered 2D Semiconductor

Title
Direct Imaging of Carrier Funneling in a Dielectric Engineered 2D Semiconductor
Author(s)
Gauriot, NicolasAshoka, ArjunLim, JuhwanSee, Soo TeckSung, JooyoungRao, Akshay
Issued Date
2024-01
Citation
ACS Nano, v.18, no.1, pp.264 - 271
Type
Article
Author Keywords
two-dimensional materialsmicroscopytransient absorptiontransition-metal dichalcogenidestransportexcitons
Keywords
TRANSITION-METAL DICHALCOGENIDESMONOLAYERWSE2ANNIHILATIONEXCITONSSTRAINMOS2WS2
ISSN
1936-0851
Abstract
In atomically thin transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs), the environmental sensitivity of the strong Coulomb interaction offers promising approaches to create spatially varying potential landscapes in the same continuous material by tuning its dielectric environment. Thus, allowing for control of transport. However, a scalable and CMOS-compatible method for achieving this is required to harness these effects in practical applications. In addition, because of their ultrashort lifetime, observing the spatiotemporal dynamics of carriers in monolayer TMDCs, on the relevant time scale, is challenging. Here, we pattern and deposit a thin film of hafnium oxide (HfO2) via atomic layer deposition (ALD) on top of a monolayer of WSe2. This allows for the engineering of the dielectric environment of the monolayer and design of heterostructures with nanoscale spatial resolution via a highly scalable postsynthesis methodology. We then directly image the transport of photoexcitations in the monolayer with 50 fs time resolution and few-nanometer spatial precision, using a pump probe microscopy technique. We observe the unidirectional funneling of charge carriers, from the unpatterned to the patterned areas, over more than 50 nm in the first 20 ps with velocities of over 2 × 103 m/s at room temperature. These results demonstrate the possibilities offered by dielectric engineering via ALD patterning, allowing for arbitrary spatial patterns that define the potential landscape and allow for control of the transport of excitations in atomically thin materials. This work also shows the power of the transient absorption methodology to image the motion of photoexcited states in complex potential landscapes on ultrafast time scales. © 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/47584
DOI
10.1021/acsnano.3c05957
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Related Researcher
  • 성주영 Sung, Jooyoung
  • Research Interests Nanostructured Semiconductor Materials; Advanced Organic Materials; Optoelectronic Properties; Time/Space-resolved Spectroscopy
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Appears in Collections:
Department of Physics and Chemistry FemtoLab for Advanced Energy Materials 1. Journal Articles

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