Twist Angle-Dependent Interlayer Exciton Lifetimes in van der Waals Heterostructures

Junho Choi(The University of Texas at Austin), Matthias Florian(University of Bremen), Alexander Steinhoff(University of Bremen), Daniel Erben(University of Bremen), Kha Tran(The University of Texas at Austin), Dong Seob Kim(The University of Texas at Austin), Liuyang Sun(The University of Texas at Austin), Jiamin Quan(The University of Texas at Austin), Robert Claassen(The University of Texas at Austin), Somak Majumder(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Jennifer A. Hollingsworth(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Takashi Taniguchi(National Institute for Materials Science), Kenji Watanabe(National Institute for Materials Science), Keiji Ueno(Saitama University), Akshay Singh(Indian Institute of Science Bangalore), Galan Moody(University of California, Santa Barbara), F. Jahnke(University of Bremen), Xiaoqin Li(The University of Texas at Austin)
Physical Review Letters
January 26, 2021
Cited by 170Open Access
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Abstract

In van der Waals (vdW) heterostructures formed by stacking two monolayers of transition metal dichalcogenides, multiple exciton resonances with highly tunable properties are formed and subject to both vertical and lateral confinement. We investigate how a unique control knob, the twist angle between the two monolayers, can be used to control the exciton dynamics. We observe that the interlayer exciton lifetimes in MoSe_{2}/WSe_{2} twisted bilayers (TBLs) change by one order of magnitude when the twist angle is varied from 1° to 3.5°. Using a low-energy continuum model, we theoretically separate two leading mechanisms that influence interlayer exciton radiative lifetimes. The shift to indirect transitions in the momentum space with an increasing twist angle and the energy modulation from the moiré potential both have a significant impact on interlayer exciton lifetimes. We further predict distinct temperature dependence of interlayer exciton lifetimes in TBLs with different twist angles, which is partially validated by experiments. While many recent studies have highlighted how the twist angle in a vdW TBL can be used to engineer the ground states and quantum phases due to many-body interaction, our studies explore its role in controlling the dynamics of optically excited states, thus, expanding the conceptual applications of "twistronics".


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