Quadrupolar excitons and hybridized interlayer Mott insulator in a trilayer moiré superlattice.
Zhen LianDongxue ChenLei MaYuze MengYing SuLi YanXiong HuangQiran WuXinyue ChenMark BleiTakashi TaniguchiKenji WatanabeSeth Ariel TongayChuanwei ZhangYong-Tao CuiSu-Fei ShiPublished in: Nature communications (2023)
Transition metal dichalcogenide (TMDC) moiré superlattices, owing to the moiré flatbands and strong correlation, can host periodic electron crystals and fascinating correlated physics. The TMDC heterojunctions in the type-II alignment also enable long-lived interlayer excitons that are promising for correlated bosonic states, while the interaction is dictated by the asymmetry of the heterojunction. Here we demonstrate a new excitonic state, quadrupolar exciton, in a symmetric WSe 2 -WS 2 -WSe 2 trilayer moiré superlattice. The quadrupolar excitons exhibit a quadratic dependence on the electric field, distinctively different from the linear Stark shift of the dipolar excitons in heterobilayers. This quadrupolar exciton stems from the hybridization of WSe 2 valence moiré flatbands. The same mechanism also gives rise to an interlayer Mott insulator state, in which the two WSe 2 layers share one hole laterally confined in one moiré unit cell. In contrast, the hole occupation probability in each layer can be continuously tuned via an out-of-plane electric field, reaching 100% in the top or bottom WSe 2 under a large electric field, accompanying the transition from quadrupolar excitons to dipolar excitons. Our work demonstrates a trilayer moiré system as a new exciting playground for realizing novel correlated states and engineering quantum phase transitions.