Concepedia

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Linearly Polarized Luminescence of Atomically Thin MoS<sub>2</sub> Semiconductor Nanocrystals

33

Citations

51

References

2019

Year

Abstract

Atomically thin layers of transition-metal dichalcogenides semiconductors, such as MoS<sub>2</sub>, exhibit strong and circularly polarized light emission due to inherent crystal symmetries, pronounced spin-orbit coupling, and out-of-plane dielectric and spatial confinement. While the layer-by-layer confinement is well-understood, the understanding of the impact of in-plane quantization in their optical spectrum is far behind. Here, we report the optical properties of atomically thin MoS<sub>2</sub> colloidal semiconductor nanocrystals. In addition to the spatial-confinement effect leading to their blue wavelength emission, the high quality of our MoS<sub>2</sub> nanocrystals is revealed by narrow photoluminescence, which allows us to resolve multiple optically active transitions, originating from quantum-confined excitons (coupled electron-hole pairs). Surprisingly, in stark contrast to monolayer MoS<sub>2</sub>, the luminescence of the lowest-energy levels is linearly polarized and persists up to <i>room temperature</i>, meaning that it could be exploited in a variety of light-emitting applications.

References

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