4.8 Article

Giant photoluminescence enhancement in tungsten-diselenide-gold plasmonic hybrid structures

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms11283

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NUS Graduate School for Integrative Sciences & Engineering (NGS)
  2. MOE Tier 1 grant [R 144-000-321-112]
  3. Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) Young Investigatorship [0926030138]
  4. SERC [092154099]
  5. National Research Foundation [NRF-CRP 8-2011-07]
  6. A*STAR-JCO [1437C00135]
  7. A*STAR Pharos Programme [152 70 00014, R-263-000-B91-305]
  8. EPSRC Reactive Plasmonics Programme Grant [EP/M013812/1]
  9. Royal Society
  10. Lee-Lucas Chair in Physics
  11. KAUST (Saudi Arabia)
  12. Taiwan Consortium of Emergent Crystalline Materials (TCECM)
  13. NRF Research Fellowship [NRF-NRFF2011-02]
  14. Singapore National Research Foundation, Prime Minister s Office, Singapore under Medium-sized Centre program
  15. EPSRC [EP/M013812/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  16. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/M013812/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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Impressive properties arise from the atomically thin nature of transition metal dichalcogenide two-dimensional materials. However, being atomically thin limits their optical absorption or emission. Hence, enhancing their photoluminescence by plasmonic nanostructures is critical for integrating these materials in optoelectronic and photonic devices. Typical photoluminescence enhancement from transition metal dichalcogenides is 100-fold, with recent enhancement of 1,000-fold achieved by simultaneously enhancing absorption, emission and directionality of the system. By suspending WSe2 flakes onto sub-20-nm-wide trenches in gold substrate, we report a giant photoluminescence enhancement of similar to 20,000-fold. It is attributed to an enhanced absorption of the pump laser due to the lateral gap plasmons confined in the trenches and the enhanced Purcell factor by the plasmonic nanostructure. This work demonstrates the feasibility of giant photoluminescence enhancement in WSe2 with judiciously designed plasmonic nanostructures and paves a way towards the implementation of plasmon-enhanced transition metal dichalcogenide photodetectors, sensors and emitters.

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