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1.
Nature ; 604(7906): 468-473, 2022 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35444320

RESUMO

Many-body interactions between carriers lie at the heart of correlated physics. The ability to tune such interactions would allow the possibility to access and control complex electronic phase diagrams. Recently, two-dimensional moiré superlattices have emerged as a promising platform for quantum engineering such phenomena1-3. The power of the moiré system lies in the high tunability of its physical parameters by adjusting the layer twist angle1-3, electrical field4-6, moiré carrier filling7-11 and interlayer coupling12. Here we report that optical excitation can highly tune the spin-spin interactions between moiré-trapped carriers, resulting in ferromagnetic order in WS2 /WSe2 moiré superlattices. Near the filling factor of -1/3 (that is, one hole per three moiré unit cells), as the excitation power at the exciton resonance increases, a well-developed hysteresis loop emerges in the reflective magnetic circular dichroism signal as a function of magnetic field, a hallmark of ferromagnetism. The hysteresis loop persists down to charge neutrality, and its shape evolves as the moiré superlattice is gradually filled, indicating changes of magnetic ground state properties. The observed phenomenon points to a mechanism in which itinerant photoexcited excitons mediate exchange coupling between moiré-trapped holes. This exciton-mediated interaction can be of longer range than direct coupling between moiré-trapped holes9, and thus magnetic order arises even in the dilute hole regime. This discovery adds a dynamic tuning knob to the rich many-body Hamiltonian of moiré quantum matter13-19.

2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(32): e2306584120, 2023 Aug 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37527343

RESUMO

Placed in cavity resonators with three-dimensionally confined electromagnetic wave, the interaction between quasiparticles in solids can be induced by exchanging virtual cavity photons, which can have a nonlocal characteristic. Here, we investigate the possibility of utilizing this nonlocality to realize the remote control of the topological transition in mesoscopic moiré superlattices at full filling (one electron/hole per supercell) embedded in a split-ring terahertz electromagnetic resonator. We show that gate tuning one moiré superlattice can remotely drive a topological band inversion in another moiré superlattice not in contact but embedded in the same cavity. Our study of remote on/off switching of a topological transition provides a paradigm for the control of material properties via cavity vacuum fields.

3.
Phys Rev Lett ; 133(8): 086501, 2024 Aug 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39241712

RESUMO

Moiré superlattices of layered transition metal dichalcogenides are proven to host periodic electron crystals due to strong correlation effects. These electron crystals can also be intertwined with intricate magnetic phenomena. In this Letter, we present our findings on the moiré exchange effect, resulting from the modulation of local magnetic moments by electron crystals within well-aligned WSe_{2}/WS_{2} heterobilayers. Employing polarization-resolved magneto-optical spectroscopy, we unveil a high-energy excitonic resonance near one hole per moiré unit cell (v=-1), which possesses a giant g factor several times greater than the already very large g factor of the WSe_{2} A exciton in this heterostructure. Supported by continuum model calculations, these high-energy states are found to be dark excitons brightened through Umklapp scattering from the moiré mini-Brillouin zone. When the carriers form a Mott insulating state near v=-1, the Coulomb exchange between doped carriers and excitons forms an effective magnetic field with moiré periodicity. This moiré exchange effect gives rise to the observed giant g factor for the excitonic Umklapp state.

4.
Nano Lett ; 23(5): 1872-1877, 2023 Mar 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36799955

RESUMO

Stacking transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) to form moiré superlattices has provided exciting opportunities to explore many-body correlation phenomena of the moiré trapped carriers. TMD bilayers, on the other hand, host long-lived interlayer exciton (IX), an elementary excitation of long spin-valley lifetime that can be optically or electrically injected. Here we find that, through the Coulomb exchange between mobile IXs and carriers, the IX bath can mediate both Heisenberg and Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya type spin interactions between moiré trapped carriers, controllable by exciton density and exciton spin current, respectively. We show the strong Heisenberg interaction and the extraordinarily long-ranged Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction here can jointly establish robust spin spiral magnetic orders in Mott-Wigner crystal states at various filling factors, with the spiral direction controlled by the exciton current.

5.
Nat Nanotechnol ; 18(5): 501-506, 2023 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36959300

RESUMO

Monolayer semiconducting transition metal dichalcogenides possess broken inversion symmetry and strong spin-orbit coupling, leading to a unique spin-valley locking effect. In 2H stacked pristine multilayers, spin-valley locking yields an electronic superlattice structure, where alternating layers correspond to barriers and quantum wells depending on the spin-valley indices. Here we show that the spin-valley locked superlattice hosts a kind of dipolar exciton with the electron and hole constituents separated in an every-other-layer configuration: that is, either in two even or two odd layers. Such excitons become optically bright via hybridization with intralayer excitons. This effect is also manifested by the presence of multiple anti-crossing patterns in the reflectance spectra, as the dipolar exciton is tuned through the intralayer resonance by an electric field. The reflectance spectra further reveal an excited state orbital of the every-other-layer exciton, pointing to a sizable binding energy in the same order of magnitude as the intralayer exciton. As layer thickness increases, the dipolar exciton can form a one-dimensional Bose-Hubbard chain displaying layer number-dependent fine spectroscopy structures.

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