Optical signatures of antiferromagnetic correlations in a strongly interacting quantum Hall MoSe2 monolayer
Jiho Sung, Pavel A. Volkov, Ilya Esterlis, Jue Wang, Luke N. Holtzmann, Takashi Taniguchi, Kenji Watanabe, Katayun Barmak, James Hone, Mikhail D. Lukin, Philip Kim, Hongkun Park

TL;DR
This study uses magneto-optical spectroscopy to reveal unconventional quantum Hall states in a MoSe2 monolayer, showing antiferromagnetic correlations and a zero valley polarization ground state in a strongly interacting electron liquid.
Contribution
It demonstrates the presence of antiferromagnetic interactions and unpolarized quantum Hall states in a strongly correlated MoSe2 monolayer, challenging conventional ferromagnetic models.
Findings
Observation of LL oscillations indicating correlated electron liquid behavior
Density-dependent LL crossings between valleys
Evidence of antiferromagnetic interactions favoring unpolarized states
Abstract
Strong magnetic fields quench the kinetic energy of electrons, leading to the formation of flat energy bands, known as Landau levels (LLs). In this situation, even weak interactions can drive the emergence of various ordered phases. The simplest of such phases is a quantum Hall ferromagnet, where a spontaneous spin polarization emerges when LLs with opposite spins cross. The presence of strong electron-electron interaction at zero field changes this picture and makes the resulting states much harder to predict. Here we use magneto-optical spectroscopy to reveal quantum Hall states with unconventional correlations favouring an unpolarized state in the strongly correlated electron liquid in a MoSe2 monolayer. The oscillations of the exciton polaron energies as a function of perpendicular magnetic field and electron density demonstrate the emergence of LLs in a correlated electron liquid…
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