Resonant band hybridization in alloyed transition metal dichalcogenide heterobilayers
Alessandro Catanzaro, Armando Genco, Charalambos Louca, David A., Ruiz-Tijerina, Daniel J. Gillard, Luca Sortino, Aleksey Kozikov, Evgeny M., Alexeev, Riccardo Pisoni, Lee Hague, Kenji Watanabe, Takashi Taniguchi,, Klauss Ensslin, Kostya S. Novoselov, Vladimir Fal'ko

TL;DR
This study explores how alloying in transition metal dichalcogenide heterobilayers allows for tunable bandstructure modifications, revealing hybridization effects that influence exciton dynamics and enabling precise electronic property engineering.
Contribution
It demonstrates the first detailed experimental and theoretical investigation of bandstructure hybridization effects in alloyed TMD heterobilayers.
Findings
IX energy shifts up to 100 meV with alloy concentration
Hybridization causes a transition from K-K to K-Q exciton processes
Modification of exciton dynamics and nonlinear properties
Abstract
Bandstructure engineering using alloying is widely utilised for achieving optimised performance in modern semiconductor devices. While alloying has been studied in monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides, its application in van der Waals heterostructures built from atomically thin layers is largely unexplored. Here, we fabricate heterobilayers made from monolayers of WSe (or MoSe) and MoWSe alloy and observe nontrivial tuning of the resultant bandstructure as a function of concentration . We monitor this evolution by measuring the energy of photoluminescence (PL) of the interlayer exciton (IX) composed of an electron and hole residing in different monolayers. In MoWSe/WSe, we observe a strong IX energy shift of 100 meV for varied from 1 to 0.6. However, for this shift saturates and the IX PL energy asymptotically…
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