# Exciton Trapping Is Responsible for the Long Apparent Lifetime in   Acid-Treated MoS2

**Authors:** Aaron J. Goodman, Adam P. Willard, William A. Tisdale

arXiv: 1706.08005 · 2017-09-20

## TL;DR

This study reveals that long exciton lifetimes in acid-treated MoS2 are due to deep trap states that capture excitons, and by saturating these traps, the true short radiative lifetime of band-edge excitons can be measured.

## Contribution

It demonstrates that dark trap states dominate exciton lifetime in acid-treated MoS2 and provides a method to measure the intrinsic radiative lifetime of band-edge excitons.

## Key findings

- Deep trap states extend hundreds of meV into the band gap.
- Saturating trap states reveals a true 150 ps radiative lifetime at 77 K.
- Trap states are associated with native structural defects, not introduced by superacid treatment.

## Abstract

Here, we show that deep trapped "dark" exciton states are responsible for the surprisingly long lifetime of band-edge photoluminescence in acid-treated single-layer MoS2. Temperature-dependent transient photoluminescence spectroscopy reveals an exponential tail of long-lived states extending hundreds of meV into the band gap. These sub-band states, which are characterized by a 4 microsecond radiative lifetime, quickly capture and store photogenerated excitons before subsequent thermalization up to the band edge where fast radiative recombination occurs. By intentionally saturating these trap states, we are able to measure the "true" 150 ps radiative lifetime of the band-edge exciton at 77 K, which extrapolates to ~600 ps at room temperature. These experiments reveal the dominant role of dark exciton states in acid-treated MoS2, and suggest that excitons spend > 95% of their lifetime at room temperature in trap states below the band edge. We hypothesize that these states are associated with native structural defects, which are not introduced by the superacid treatment; rather, the superacid treatment dramatically reduces non-radiative recombination through these states, extending the exciton lifetime and increasing the likelihood of eventual radiative recombination.

## Full text

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## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.08005/full.md

## References

31 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.08005/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.08005