Publication | Open Access
Theory of two-dimensional spatially indirect equilibrium exciton condensates
134
Citations
41
References
2015
Year
Quantum SciencePolariton DynamicEngineeringPhysicsHexagonal Boron NitrideNanoelectronicsHexagonal BoronNatural SciencesCondensed Matter PhysicsQuantum MaterialsSuperconductivityApplied PhysicsDisordered Quantum SystemThermal EquilibriumBilayer SystemQuantum ChemistryBose-einstein CondensationLow-dimensional System
We present a theory of bilayer two-dimensional electron systems that host a spatially indirect exciton condensate when in thermal equilibrium. Equilibrium bilayer exciton condensates (BXCs) are expected to form when two nearby semiconductor layers are electrically isolated, and when the conduction band of one layer is brought close to degeneracy with the valence band of a nearby layer by varying bias or gate voltages. BXCs are characterized by spontaneous interlayer phase coherence and counterflow superfluidity. The bilayer system we consider is composed of two transition metal dichalcogenide monolayers separated and surrounded by hexagonal boron nitride. We use mean-field theory and a bosonic weakly interacting exciton model to explore the BXC phase diagram, and time-dependent mean-field theory to address condensate collective mode spectra and quantum fluctuations. We find that a phase transition occurs between states containing one and two condensate components as the layer separation and the exciton density are varied, and derive simple approximate expressions for the exciton-exciton interaction strength which we show can be measured capacitively.
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