Role of the Direct-to-Indirect Bandgap Crossover in the 'Reverse' Energy Transfer Process
Role of the Direct-to-Indirect Bandgap Crossover in the 'Reverse' Energy Transfer Process
Energy transfer (ET) is a dipole-dipole interaction, mediated by the virtual photon. Traditionally, ET happens from the higher (donor) to lower bandgap (acceptor) material. However, in some rare instances, a 'reverse' ET can happen from the lower-to-higher bandgap material depending on the strong overlap between the acceptor photoluminescence (PL) and the donor absorption spectra. In this work, we report a reverse ET process from the lower bandgap MoS2 to higher bandgap WS2, due to the near 'resonant' overlap between the MoS2 B and WS2 A excitonic levels. Changing the MoS2 bandgap from direct-to-indirect by increasing the layer number results in a reduced ET rate, evident by the quenching of the WS2 PL emission. We also find that, at 300 K the estimated ET timescale of around 45 fs is faster than the reported thermalization of the MoS2 excitonic intervalley scattering (K+ to K-) time and comparable with the interlayer charge transfer time.
Maciej R. Molas、Arka Karmakar、Gayatri、Mehdi Arfaoui、Debashish Das、Tomasz Kazimierczuk、Natalia Zawadzka、Takashi Taniguchi、Kenji Watanabe、Adam Babinski、Saroj K. Nayak
光电子技术半导体技术电子技术应用
Maciej R. Molas,Arka Karmakar,Gayatri,Mehdi Arfaoui,Debashish Das,Tomasz Kazimierczuk,Natalia Zawadzka,Takashi Taniguchi,Kenji Watanabe,Adam Babinski,Saroj K. Nayak.Role of the Direct-to-Indirect Bandgap Crossover in the 'Reverse' Energy Transfer Process[EB/OL].(2025-04-17)[2025-05-17].https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.13318.点此复制
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