Nanomaterials (Dec 2022)

Enhanced Field-Effect Control of Single-Layer WS<sub>2</sub> Optical Features by hBN Full Encapsulation

  • Anna Di Renzo,
  • Onur Çakıroğlu,
  • Felix Carrascoso,
  • Hao Li,
  • Giuseppe Gigli,
  • Kenji Watanabe,
  • Takashi Taniguchi,
  • Carmen Munuera,
  • Aurora Rizzo,
  • Andres Castellanos-Gomez,
  • Rosanna Mastria,
  • Riccardo Frisenda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nano12244425
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 24
p. 4425

Abstract

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The field-effect control of the electrical and optical properties of two-dimensional (2D) van der Waals semiconductors (vdW) is one important aspect of this novel class of materials. Thanks to their reduced thickness and decreased screening, electric fields can easily penetrate in a 2D semiconductor and thus modulate their charge density and their properties. In literature, the field effect is routinely used to fabricate atomically thin field-effect transistors based on 2D semiconductors. Apart from the tuning of the electrical transport, it has been demonstrated that the field effect can also be used to modulate the excitonic optical emission of 2D transition metal dichalcogenides such as MoS2 or WSe2. In this paper, we present some recent experiments on the field-effect control of the optical and excitonic properties of the monolayer WS2. Using the deterministic transfer of van der Waals materials, we fabricate planar single-layer WS2 devices contacted by a gold electrode and partially sandwiched between two insulating hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) flakes. Thanks to the planar nature of the device, we can optically access both the hBN encapsulated and the unencapsulated WS2 regions and compare the field-effect control of the exciton population in the two cases. We find that the encapsulation strongly increases the range of tunability of the optical emission of WS2, allowing us to tune the photoluminescence emission from excitons-dominated to trions-dominated. We also discuss how the full encapsulation of WS2 with hBN helps reduce spurious hysteretic effects in the field-effect control of the optical properties, similar to what has been reported for 2D vdW field-effect transistors.

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