Login / Signup

Bilayer WSe 2 as a natural platform for interlayer exciton condensates in the strong coupling limit.

Qianhui ShiEn-Min ShihDaniel RhodesBumho KimKatayun BarmakKenji WatanabeTakashi TaniguchiZlatko PapićDmitry A AbaninJames C HoneCory R Dean
Published in: Nature nanotechnology (2022)
Exciton condensates (ECs) are macroscopic coherent states arising from condensation of electron-hole pairs 1 . Bilayer heterostructures, consisting of two-dimensional electron and hole layers separated by a tunnel barrier, provide a versatile platform to realize and study ECs 2-4 . The tunnel barrier suppresses recombination, yielding long-lived excitons 5-10 . However, this separation also reduces interlayer Coulomb interactions, limiting the exciton binding strength. Here, we report the observation of ECs in naturally occurring 2H-stacked bilayer WSe 2 . In this system, the intrinsic spin-valley structure suppresses interlayer tunnelling even when the separation is reduced to the atomic limit, providing access to a previously unattainable regime of strong interlayer coupling. Using capacitance spectroscopy, we investigate magneto-ECs, formed when partially filled Landau levels couple between the layers. We find that the strong-coupling ECs show dramatically different behaviour compared with previous reports, including an unanticipated variation of EC robustness with the orbital number, and find evidence for a transition between two types of low-energy charged excitations. Our results provide a demonstration of tuning EC properties by varying the constituent single-particle wavefunctions.
Keyphrases