Abstract

Odd-angular momentum exciton states are dark to light in monolayers of transition-metal dichalcogenides and can be addressed only by two-photon probes. Besides, $2p$ excitons states are expected to show a fine splitting that arises from the peculiar electronic band structure of the material, characterized by a finite Berry curvature around each valley. In this work we study in detail the coupling of photons to $p$ exciton states and we find that the Rashba spin-orbit interaction or a Skyrmion in the transition-metal dichalcogenide substrate can be exploited to engineer finite optical selection rules. The basis mechanism relies on a matching of the exciton angular momentum with the winding of the Rashba spin-orbit interaction or the Skyrmion topological charge. In a photonic cavity, the coupling is enhanced due to photon confinement and the resulting polaritonic branches acquire a mixing with $2p^\pm$ excitons, thus providing a useful tool to detect exciton fine-splitting and and enable novel uses of odd-parity dark excitons.

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