Broad-Range Modulation of Light Emission in Two-Dimensional Semiconductors by Molecular Physisorption Gating
University of California, Berkeley · Massachusetts Institute of Technology · +3 more institutions
Abstract
In the monolayer limit, transition metal dichalcogenides become direct-bandgap, light-emitting semiconductors. The quantum yield of light emission is low and extremely sensitive to the substrate used, while the underlying physics remains elusive. In this work, we report over 100 times modulation of light emission efficiency of these two-dimensional semiconductors by physical adsorption of O2 and/or H2O molecules, while inert gases do not cause such effect. The O2 and/or H2O pressure acts quantitatively as an instantaneously reversible "molecular gating" force, providing orders of magnitude broader control of carrier density and light emission than conventional electric field gating. Physi-sorbed O2 and/or H2O…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 29.31
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 30
Authors
10Topics & keywords
- Semiconductor
- Physisorption
- Monolayer
- Photoluminescence
- Light emission
- Chemical physics
- Optoelectronics
- Materials science
- Affordable and clean energy