A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Exciton Transfer at Heterointerfaces of MoS2 Monolayers and Fluorescent Molecular Aggregates
AbstractIntegration of distinct materials to form heterostructures enables the proposal of new functional devices based on emergent physical phenomena beyond the properties of the constituent materials. The optical responses and electrical transport characteristics of heterostructures depend on the charge and exciton transfer (CT and ET) at the interfaces, determined by the interfacial energy level alignment. In this work, heterostructures consisting of aggregates of fluorescent molecules (DY1) and 2D semiconductor MoS2 monolayers are fabricated. Photoluminescence spectra of DY1/MoS2 show quenching of the DY1 emission and enhancement of the MoS2 emission, indicating a strong electronic interaction between these two materials. Nanoscopic mappings of the light‐induced contact potential difference changes rule out the CT process at the interface. Using femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy, the rapid interfacial ET process from DY1 aggregates to MoS2 and a fourfold extension of the exciton lifetime in MoS2 are elucidated. These results suggest that the integration of 2D inorganic semiconductors with fluorescent molecules can provide versatile approaches to engineer the physical characteristics of materials for both fundamental studies and novel optoelectronic device applications.
Exciton Transfer at Heterointerfaces of MoS2 Monolayers and Fluorescent Molecular Aggregates
AbstractIntegration of distinct materials to form heterostructures enables the proposal of new functional devices based on emergent physical phenomena beyond the properties of the constituent materials. The optical responses and electrical transport characteristics of heterostructures depend on the charge and exciton transfer (CT and ET) at the interfaces, determined by the interfacial energy level alignment. In this work, heterostructures consisting of aggregates of fluorescent molecules (DY1) and 2D semiconductor MoS2 monolayers are fabricated. Photoluminescence spectra of DY1/MoS2 show quenching of the DY1 emission and enhancement of the MoS2 emission, indicating a strong electronic interaction between these two materials. Nanoscopic mappings of the light‐induced contact potential difference changes rule out the CT process at the interface. Using femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy, the rapid interfacial ET process from DY1 aggregates to MoS2 and a fourfold extension of the exciton lifetime in MoS2 are elucidated. These results suggest that the integration of 2D inorganic semiconductors with fluorescent molecules can provide versatile approaches to engineer the physical characteristics of materials for both fundamental studies and novel optoelectronic device applications.
Exciton Transfer at Heterointerfaces of MoS2 Monolayers and Fluorescent Molecular Aggregates
Advanced Science
Kwon, Soyeong (author) / Jeong, Dong Yeun (author) / Hong, Chengyun (author) / Oh, Saejin (author) / Song, Jungeun (author) / Choi, Soo Ho (author) / Kim, Ki Kang (author) / Yoon, Seokhyun (author) / Choi, Taeyoung (author) / Yee, Ki‐Ju (author)
Advanced Science ; 9
2022-08-01
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Exciton Transfer at Heterointerfaces of MoS2 Monolayers and Fluorescent Molecular Aggregates
Wiley | 2022
|Heterointerfaces of CdTe/-Sn/InSb structure grown by molecular beam epitaxy
British Library Online Contents | 1994
|Heterointerfaces of stable and metastable ZnO phases
British Library Online Contents | 2008
|Influence of interdiffusion and surfactants on Si/SiGe heterointerfaces
British Library Online Contents | 1996
|Exciton Band Structures in 2D Aggregates of Cyanine Dyes
British Library Online Contents | 1995
|