Optical Emission from Light-like and Particle-like Excitons in Monolayer Transition Metal Dichalcogenides
Mikkel Ohm Sauer, Carl Emil M{\o}rch Nielsen, Lars Merring-Mikkelsen,, and Thomas Garm Pedersen

TL;DR
This paper investigates the unique exciton band structures in monolayer TMDs, revealing how light-like excitons influence emission patterns and lifetimes, with implications for optoelectronic device performance.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive analysis of light-like excitons in TMDs, highlighting their impact on emission properties and providing first-principles calculations of exciton band structures.
Findings
Light-like excitons significantly affect emission at elevated temperatures.
Angular emission patterns are modified by the population of light-like excitons.
Experimental signatures of light-like excitons are predicted and explained.
Abstract
Several monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are direct band gap semiconductors and potentially efficient emitters in light emitting devices. Photons are emitted when strongly bound excitons decay radiatively, and accurate models of such excitons are important for a full understanding of the emission. Importantly, photons are emitted in directions uniquely determined by the exciton center of mass momentum and with lifetimes determined by the exciton transition matrix element. The exciton band structures of two-dimensional hexagonal materials, including TMDs, are highly unusual with coexisting particle- and light-like bands. The latter is non-analytic with emission selection rules essentially opposite to the particle-like states, but has been ignored in analyses of TMD light emission so far. In the present work, we analyse the temperature and angular dependence of light…
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