Impact of substrate induced band tail states on the electronic and optical properties of MoS2


Journal article


J. Klein, A. Kerelsky, M. Lorke, M. Florian, F. Sigger, J. Kiemle, M. Reuter, T. Taniguchi, K. Watanabe, J. Finley, A. Pasupathy, A. Holleitner, F. Ross, U. Wurstbauer
2019

Semantic Scholar DOI
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Klein, J., Kerelsky, A., Lorke, M., Florian, M., Sigger, F., Kiemle, J., … Wurstbauer, U. (2019). Impact of substrate induced band tail states on the electronic and optical properties of MoS2.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Klein, J., A. Kerelsky, M. Lorke, M. Florian, F. Sigger, J. Kiemle, M. Reuter, et al. “Impact of Substrate Induced Band Tail States on the Electronic and Optical Properties of MoS2” (2019).


MLA   Click to copy
Klein, J., et al. Impact of Substrate Induced Band Tail States on the Electronic and Optical Properties of MoS2. 2019.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{j2019a,
  title = {Impact of substrate induced band tail states on the electronic and optical properties of MoS2},
  year = {2019},
  author = {Klein, J. and Kerelsky, A. and Lorke, M. and Florian, M. and Sigger, F. and Kiemle, J. and Reuter, M. and Taniguchi, T. and Watanabe, K. and Finley, J. and Pasupathy, A. and Holleitner, A. and Ross, F. and Wurstbauer, U.}
}

Abstract

Substrate, environment, and lattice imperfections have a strong impact on the local electronic structure and the optical properties of atomically thin transition metal dichalcogenides. We find by a comparative study of MoS2 on SiO2 and hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) using scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS) measurements that the apparent bandgap of MoS2 on SiO2 is significantly reduced compared to MoS2 on hBN. The bandgap energies as well as the exciton binding energies determined from all-optical measurements are very similar for MoS2 on SiO2 and hBN. This discrepancy is found to be caused by a substantial amount of band tail states near the conduction band edge of MoS2 supported by SiO2. The presence of those states impacts the local density of states in STS measurements and can be linked to a broad red-shifted photoluminescence peak and a higher charge carrier density that are all strongly diminished or even absent using high quality hBN substrates. By taking into account the substrate effects, we obtain a quasiparticle gap that is in excellent agreement with optical absorbance spectra and we deduce an exciton binding energy of about 0.53 eV on SiO2 and 0.44 eV on hBN.





Follow this website


You need to create an Owlstown account to follow this website.


Sign up

Already an Owlstown member?

Log in