Effect of fermion indistinguishability on optical absorption of doped two-dimensional semiconductors
A. Tiene, J. Levinsen, J. Keeling, M. M. Parish, F. M. Marchetti

TL;DR
This paper investigates how fermion indistinguishability affects the optical absorption spectrum of doped two-dimensional semiconductors, revealing unique p-wave trion states and their doping-dependent spectral features.
Contribution
It introduces a polaron-based approach to analyze the impact of fermion indistinguishability on excitonic and trionic states in doped 2D semiconductors, highlighting p-wave symmetry effects.
Findings
At low doping, the oscillator strength of the attractive branch scales with the square of the Fermi energy.
Both the repulsive and attractive branches blueshift with increasing doping.
The orbital character of the states associated with these branches interchanges at higher doping.
Abstract
We study the optical absorption spectrum of a doped two-dimensional semiconductor in the spin-valley polarized limit. In this configuration, the carriers in the Fermi sea are indistinguishable from one of the two carriers forming the exciton. Most notably, this indistinguishability requires the three-body trion state to have p-wave symmetry. To explore the consequences of this, we evaluate the system's optical properties within a polaron description, which can interpolate from the low density limit -- where the relevant excitations are few-body bound states -- to higher density many-body states. In the parameter regime where the trion is bound, we demonstrate that the spectrum is characterized by an attractive quasiparticle branch, a repulsive branch, and a many-body continuum, and we evaluate the doping dependence of the corresponding energies and spectral weights. In particular, at…
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