Tip-Induced and Electrical Control of the Photoluminescence Yield of Monolayer WS 2 .
Ricardo Javier Peña RománRémi BretelDelphine PommierLuis Enrique Parra LópezEtienne LorchatElizabeth Boer-DucheminGérald DujardinAndrey G BorisovLuiz Fernando ZagonelGuillaume SchullStephane BerciaudEric Le MoalPublished in: Nano letters (2022)
The photoluminescence (PL) of monolayer tungsten disulfide (WS 2 ) is locally and electrically controlled using the nonplasmonic tip and tunneling current of a scanning tunneling microscope (STM). The spatial and spectral distribution of the emitted light is determined using an optical microscope. When the STM tip is engaged, short-range PL quenching due to near-field electromagnetic effects is present, independent of the sign and value of the bias voltage applied to the tip-sample tunneling junction. In addition, a bias-voltage-dependent long-range PL quenching is measured when the sample is positively biased. We explain these observations by considering the native n-doping of monolayer WS 2 and the charge carrier density gradients induced by electron tunneling in micrometer-scale areas around the tip position. The combination of wide-field PL microscopy and charge carrier injection using an STM opens up new ways to explore the interplay between excitons and charge carriers in two-dimensional semiconductors.