4.7 Article

Spatiotemporal Mapping of a Photocurrent Vortex in Monolayer MoS2 Using Diamond Quantum Sensors

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW X
Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevX.10.011003

Keywords

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Funding

  1. AFOSR [FA9550-14-1-0231, ARO MURI W911NF-14-1-0016, ONR N00014-17-1-3026, FA9550-16-1-0031, FA9550-18-1-0480]
  2. University of Chicago MRSEC Grant [DMR-1420709]
  3. Boston College
  4. NSF through MRSEC program at Cornell [DMR-1719875]
  5. NSF through MRSEC program at University of Chicago [DMR-1420709]
  6. NSF through MRSEC program at Materials Innovation Platform program [DMR-1539918]

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Photocurrents are central to understanding and harnessing the interaction of light with matter. Here, we introduce a contact-free method to spatially resolve photocurrent distributions using proximal quantum magnetometers. We interface monolayer MoS2 with a near-surface ensemble of nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond and map the generated photothermal current distribution through its magnetic-field profile. By synchronizing pulsed photoexcitation with dynamical decoupling of the sensor spin, we extend the sensor's quantum coherence and resolve time-dependent, two-dimensional current densities as small as 20 nA/mu m, with a projected sensitivity of 200 nA/mu m root Hz). Our spatially resolved measurements reveal that optical excitation can generate micron-sized photocurrent vortices in MoS2, manifesting a photo-Nernst effect exceeding that of gate-tuned graphene at comparable magnetic fields. We further probe the rise time of the photocurrents and show that thermal diffusion determines its spatial variation. These spatiotemporal capabilities establish an optically accessed, local probe for optoelectronic phenomena, ideally suited to the emerging class of two-dimensional materials, for which making contacts is challenging and can alter the intrinsic material properties.

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