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Cited 197 time in webofscience Cited 203 time in scopus
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Strain-Mediated Interlayer Coupling Effects on the Excitonic Behaviors in an Epitaxially Grown MoS2/WS2 van der Waals Heterobilayeropen access

Authors
Pak, SangyeonLee, JuwonLee, Young-WooJang, A-RangAhn, SeongjoonMa, Kyung YeolCho, YuljaeHong, JohnLee, SanghyoJeong, Hu YoungIm, HyunsikShin, Hyeon SukMorris, Stephen M.Cha, SeungNamSohn, Jung InnKim, Jong Min
Issue Date
Sep-2017
Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
Keywords
van der Waals heterostructures; MoS2/WS2; strain engineering; interlayer interactions; band gap transition
Citation
NANO LETTERS, v.17, no.9, pp 5634 - 5640
Pages
7
Indexed
SCI
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
NANO LETTERS
Volume
17
Number
9
Start Page
5634
End Page
5640
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/23804
DOI
10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b02513
ISSN
1530-6984
1530-6992
Abstract
van der Waals heterostructures composed of two different monolayer crystals have recently attracted attention as a powerful and versatile platform for studying fundamental physics, as well as having great potential in future functional devices because of the diversity in the band alignments and the unique interlayer coupling that occurs at the heterojunction interface. However, despite these attractive features, a fundamental understanding of the underlying physics accounting for the effect of interlayer coupling on the interactions between electrons, photons, and phonons in the stacked heterobilayer is still lacking. Here, we demonstrate a detailed analysis of the strain-dependent excitonic behavior of an epitaxially grown MoS2/WS2 vertical heterostructure under uniaxial tensile and compressive strain that enables the interlayer interactions to be modulated along with the electronic band structure. We find that the strain-modulated interlayer coupling directly affects the characteristic combined vibrational and excitonic properties of each monolayer in the heterobilayer. It is further revealed that the relative photoluminescence intensity ratio of WS2 to MoS2 in our heterobilayer increases monotonically with tensile strain and decreases with compressive strain. We attribute the strain-dependent emission behavior of the heterobilayer to the modulation of the band structure for each monolayer, which is dictated by the alterations in the band gap transitions. These findings present an important pathway toward designing heterostructures and flexible devices.
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