Interlayer (IL) excitons, comprising electrons and holes residing in different layers of van der Waals bonded two-dimensional semiconductors, have opened new opportunities for room-temperature excitonic devices. So far, two-dimensional IL excitons have been realized in heterobilayers with type-II band alignment. However, the small oscillator strength of the resulting IL excitons and difficulties with producing heterostructures with definite crystal orientation over large areas have challenged the practical applicability of this design. Here, following the theoretical prediction and recent experimental confirmation of the existence of IL excitons in bilayer MoS, we demonstrate the electrical control of such excitons up to room temperature. We find that the IL excitonic states preserve their large oscillator strength as their energies are manipulated by the electric field. We attribute this effect to the mixing of the pure IL excitons with intralayer excitons localized in a single layer. By applying an electric field perpendicular to the bilayer MoS crystal plane, excitons with IL character split into two peaks with an X-shaped field dependence as a clear fingerprint of the shift of the monolayer bands with respect to each other. Finally, we demonstrate the full control of the energies of IL excitons distributed homogeneously over a large area of our device.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41565-021-00916-1 | DOI Listing |
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