posted on 2019-12-16, 16:10authored byJeffrey L. Blackburn, Hanyu Zhang, Alexis R. Myers, Jeremy R. Dunklin, David C. Coffey, Rebecca N. Hirsch, Derek Vigil-Fowler, Seok Joon Yun, Byeong Wook Cho, Young Hee Lee, Elisa M. Miller, Garry Rumbles, Obadiah G. Reid
Photoinduced generation of mobile charge carriers is
the fundamental
process underlying many applications, such as solar energy harvesting,
solar fuel production, and efficient photodetectors. Monolayer transition-metal
dichalcogenides (TMDCs) are an attractive model system for studying
photoinduced carrier generation mechanisms in low-dimensional materials
because they possess strong direct band gap absorption, large exciton
binding energies, and are only a few atoms thick. While a number of
studies have observed charge generation in neat TMDCs for photoexcitation
at, above, or even below the optical band gap, the role of nonlinear
processes (resulting from high photon fluences), defect states, excess
charges, and layer interactions remains unclear. In this study, we
introduce steady-state microwave conductivity (SSMC) spectroscopy
for measuring charge generation action spectra in a model WS2 mono- to few-layer TMDC system at fluences that coincide with the
terrestrial solar flux. Despite utilizing photon fluences well below
those used in previous pump–probe measurements, the SSMC technique
is sensitive enough to easily resolve the photoconductivity spectrum
arising in mono- to few-layer WS2. By correlating SSMC
with other spectroscopy and microscopy experiments, we find that photoconductivity
is observed predominantly for excitation wavelengths resonant with
the excitonic transition of the multilayer portions of the sample,
the density of which can be controlled by the synthesis conditions.
These results highlight the potential of layer engineering as a route
toward achieving high yields of photoinduced charge carriers in neat
TMDCs, with implications for a broad range of optoelectronic applications.