Issue 17, 2022

Near-field spectroscopic imaging of exciton quenching at atomically sharp MoS2/WS2 lateral heterojunctions

Abstract

Heterojunctions made by laterally stitching two different transition metal dichalcogenide monolayers create a unique one-dimensional boundary with intriguing local optical properties that can only be characterized by nanoscale-spatial-resolution spectral tools. Here, we use near-field photoluminescence (NF-PL) to reveal the narrowest region (105 nm) ever reported of photoluminescence quenching at the junction of a laterally stitched WS2/MoS2 monolayer. We attribute this quenching to the atomically sharp band offset that generates a strong electric force at the junction to easily dissociate excitons. Besides the sharp heterojunction, a model considering various widths of the alloying interfacial region under low or high optical pumping is presented. With a spatial resolution six times better than that of confocal microscopy, NF-PL provides an unprecedented spectral tool for non-scalable 1D lateral heterojunctions.

Graphical abstract: Near-field spectroscopic imaging of exciton quenching at atomically sharp MoS2/WS2 lateral heterojunctions

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
12 Jan 2022
Accepted
22 Feb 2022
First published
17 Mar 2022

Nanoscale, 2022,14, 6323-6330

Near-field spectroscopic imaging of exciton quenching at atomically sharp MoS2/WS2 lateral heterojunctions

H. Chou, X. Zhang, S. Shiau, C. Chien, P. Tang, C. Sung, Y. Chang, Y. Lee and C. Chen, Nanoscale, 2022, 14, 6323 DOI: 10.1039/D2NR00216G

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