Disentangling Many-Body Effects in the Coherent Optical Response of 2D Semiconductors

Nano Lett. 2022 Jul 13;22(13):5322-5329. doi: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.2c01309. Epub 2022 Jun 27.

Abstract

In single-layer (1L) transition metal dichalcogenides, the reduced Coulomb screening results in strongly bound excitons which dominate the linear and the nonlinear optical response. Despite the large number of studies, a clear understanding on how many-body and Coulomb correlation effects affect the excitonic resonances on a femtosecond time scale is still lacking. Here, we use ultrashort laser pulses to measure the transient optical response of 1L-WS2. In order to disentangle many-body effects, we perform exciton line-shape analysis, and we study its temporal dynamics as a function of the excitation photon energy and fluence. We find that resonant photoexcitation produces a blue shift of the A exciton, while for above-resonance photoexcitation the transient response at the optical bandgap is largely determined by a reduction of the exciton oscillator strength. Microscopic calculations based on excitonic Heisenberg equations of motion quantitatively reproduce the nonlinear absorption of the material and its dependence on excitation conditions.

Keywords: Kramers−Kronig analysis; Transition metal dichancogenides; coherent optical response; exciton dynamics; many-body effects; pump−probe.