2D condensate of electrons and holes in ultrathin MoTe$_2$ photocells
Trevor B. Arp, Dennis Pleskot, Vivek Aji, Nathaniel M. Gabor

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the formation of a two-dimensional electron-hole condensate in ultrathin MoTe2 photocells, revealing a phase transition from gas to liquid with distinct spatial and dynamic signatures at room temperature.
Contribution
It provides direct visualization and analysis of the electron-hole liquid phase transition in ultrathin MoTe2, a novel observation in 2D materials at room temperature.
Findings
Ring-like spatial patterns in photocurrent at high power
Sublinear power dependence of photocurrent
Picosecond-scale photocurrent dynamics
Abstract
The electron-hole liquid, which features a macroscopic population of correlated electrons and holes, may offer a path to room temperature semiconductor devices that harness collective electronic phenomena. We report on the gas-to-liquid phase transition of electrons and holes in ultrathin molybdenum ditelluride photocells revealed through multi-parameter dynamic photoresponse microscopy (MPDPM). By combining rich visualization with comprehensive analysis of very large data sets acquired through MPDPM, we find that ultrafast laser excitation at a graphene-MoTe-graphene interface leads to the abrupt formation of ring-like spatial patterns in the photocurrent response as a function of increasing optical power at T = 297 K. These patterns, together with extreme sublinear power dependence and picosecond-scale photocurrent dynamics, provide strong evidence for the formation of a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStrong Light-Matter Interactions · Graphene research and applications · Topological Materials and Phenomena
