4.8 Article

Vibronic Exciton-Phonon States in Stack-Engineered van der Waals Heterojunction Photodiodes

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 22, Issue 14, Pages 5751-5758

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.2c00944

Keywords

vibronic; photocurrent; interlayer excitons; stack engineering; van der Waals heterostructures

Funding

  1. Army Research Office Electronics Division
  2. Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE) through the Air Force Office of Scientific Research
  3. National Science Foundation Division of Materials Research CAREER Award
  4. United States Department of the Navy Historically Black Colleges, Universities and Minority Serving Institutions (HBCU/MI) [W911NF2110260]
  5. Fellowships and Internships in Extremely Large Data Sets (FIELDS) program [FA9550-20-1-0097]
  6. NASA MUREP Institutional Research Opportunity (MIRO) program [1651247]
  7. Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW) [N00014-19-1-2574]
  8. Canadian Institute of Solar Energy Research (CEA)
  9. Singapore Ministry of Education under its MOEAcRF Tier 3 Award [NNX15AP99A]
  10. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union
  11. Villum Foundation
  12. NSF [MOE2018-T3-1-002]
  13. National Science Foundation [678862]
  14. [EFRI-1433395]
  15. [ACI-1053575]
  16. [TG-DMR130081]

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Stack engineering is a metamaterial strategy that allows for the design of optical and electronic properties. In this study, the optoelectronic effects of stacking-induced strong coupling and interlayer excitons in heterojunction photodiodes were revealed.
Stack engineering, an atomic-scale metamaterial strategy, enables the design of optical and electronic properties in van der Waals heterostructure devices. Here we reveal the optoelectronic effects of stacking-induced strong coupling between atomic motion and interlayer excitons in WSe2/MoSe2 heterojunction photodiodes. To do so, we introduce the photocurrent spectroscopy of a stack-engineered photodiode as a sensitive technique for probing interlayer excitons, enabling access to vibronic states typically found only in molecule-like systems. The vibronic states in our stack are manifest as a palisade of pronounced periodic sidebands in the photocurrent spectrum in frequency windows close to the interlayer exciton resonances and can be shifted on demand through the application of a perpendicular electric field via a source-drain bias voltage. The observation of multiple well-resolved sidebands as well as their ability to be shifted by applied voltages vividly demonstrates the emergence of interlayer exciton vibronic structure in a stack-engineered optoelectronic device.

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