npj 2D Materials and Applications (Nov 2022)

Exciton spectroscopy and unidirectional transport in MoSe2-WSe2 lateral heterostructures encapsulated in hexagonal boron nitride

  • Dorian Beret,
  • Ioannis Paradisanos,
  • Hassan Lamsaadi,
  • Ziyang Gan,
  • Emad Najafidehaghani,
  • Antony George,
  • Tibor Lehnert,
  • Johannes Biskupek,
  • Ute Kaiser,
  • Shivangi Shree,
  • Ana Estrada-Real,
  • Delphine Lagarde,
  • Xavier Marie,
  • Pierre Renucci,
  • Kenji Watanabe,
  • Takashi Taniguchi,
  • Sébastien Weber,
  • Vincent Paillard,
  • Laurent Lombez,
  • Jean-Marie Poumirol,
  • Andrey Turchanin,
  • Bernhard Urbaszek

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41699-022-00354-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Chemical vapor deposition (CVD) allows lateral edge epitaxy of transition metal dichalcogenide heterostructures. Critical for carrier and exciton transport is the material quality and the nature of the lateral heterojunction. Important details of the optical properties were inaccessible in as-grown heterostructure samples due to large inhomogeneous broadening of the optical transitions. Here we perform optical spectroscopy of CVD grown MoSe2-WSe2 lateral heterostructures, encapsulated in hBN. Photoluminescence (PL), reflectance contrast and Raman spectroscopy reveal optical transition linewidths similar to high quality exfoliated monolayers, while PL imaging experiments uncover the effective excitonic diffusion length of both materials. The typical extent of the covalently bonded MoSe2-WSe2 heterojunctions is 3 nm measured by scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM). Tip-enhanced, sub-wavelength optical spectroscopy mapping shows the high quality of the heterojunction which acts as an excitonic diode resulting in unidirectional exciton transfer from WSe2 to MoSe2.