Strong Effects of Interlayer Interaction on Valence-Band Splitting in Transition Metal Dichalcogenides
Garrett Benson, Viviane Zurdo Costa, Neal Border, Kentaro Yumigeta,, Mark Blei, Sefaattin Tongay, K. Watanabe, T. Taniguchi, Andrew Ichimura,, Santosh KC, Taha Salavati-fard, Bin Wang, and Akm Newaz

TL;DR
This study reveals that valence band splitting in transition metal dichalcogenides is strongly influenced by interlayer interactions and temperature, challenging the notion that spin-orbit coupling alone determines this property.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that interlayer coupling significantly affects valence band splitting in TMDs, supported by experimental data and theoretical calculations, highlighting the importance of interlayer interactions.
Findings
VBM splitting depends on temperature and layer number.
Interlayer coupling influences VBM splitting, not just spin-orbit effects.
Theoretical models agree with experimental observations.
Abstract
Understanding the origin of valence band maxima (VBM) splitting in transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) is important because it governs the unique spin and valley physics in monolayer and multilayer TMDs. In this work, we present our systematic study of VBM splitting () in atomically thin MoS and WS by employing photocurrent spectroscopy as we change the temperature and the layer numbers. We found that VBM splitting in monolayer MoS and WS depends strongly on temperature, which contradicts the theory that spin-orbit coupling solely determines the VBM splitting in monolayer TMDs. We also found that the rate of change of VBM splitting with respect to temperature () is the highest for monolayer (-0.14 meV/K for MoS) and the rate decreases as the layer number increases ( meV/K for 5 layers MoS). We performed…
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