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Quadrupolar-dipolar excitonic transition in a tunnel-coupled van der Waals heterotrilayer.

Weijie LiZach HadjriLuka M DevenicaSheng MengSong LiuJames C HoneKenji WatanabeTakashi TaniguchiAngel RubioAjit Srivastava
Published in: Nature materials (2023)
Strongly bound excitons determine light-matter interactions in van der Waals heterostructures of two-dimensional semiconductors. Unlike fundamental particles, quasiparticles in condensed matter, such as excitons, can be tailored to alter their interactions and realize emergent quantum phases. Here, using a WS 2 /WSe 2 /WS 2 heterotrilayer, we create a quantum superposition of oppositely oriented dipolar excitons-a quadrupolar exciton-wherein an electron is layer-hybridized in WS 2 layers while the hole localizes in WSe 2 . In contrast to dipolar excitons, symmetric quadrupolar excitons only redshift in an out-of-plane electric field. At higher densities and a finite electric field, the nonlinear Stark shift of quadrupolar excitons becomes linear, signalling a transition to dipolar excitons resulting from exciton-exciton interactions, while at a vanishing electric field, the reduced exchange interaction suggests antiferroelectric correlations between dipolar excitons. Our results present van der Waals heterotrilayers as a field-tunable platform to engineer light-matter interactions and explore quantum phase transitions between spontaneously ordered many-exciton phases.
Keyphrases
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