Abstract

Raman spectra of few-layer MoSe2 were measured with eight excitation energies. New peaks that appear only near resonance with various exciton states are analyzed, and the modes are assigned. The resonance profiles of the Raman peaks reflect the joint density of states for optical transitions, but the symmetry of the exciton wave functions leads to selective enhancement of the A1g mode at the A exciton energy and the shear mode at the C exciton energy. We also find Davydov splitting of intralayer A1g, E1g, and A2u modes due to interlayer interaction for some excitation energies near resonances. Furthermore, by fitting the spectral positions of interlayer shear and breathing modes and Davydov splitting of intralayer modes to a linear chain model, we extract the strength of the interlayer interaction. We find that the second-nearest-neighbor interlayer interaction amounts to about 30% of the nearest-neighbor interaction for both in-plane and out-of-plane vibrations.

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