Abstract
Geometrical confinement effect in exfoliated sheets of layered materials leads to significant evolution of energy dispersion with decreasing layer thickness. Molybdenum disulphide (MoS2) was recently found to exhibit indirect to direct gap transition when the thickness is reduced to a single monolayer. This leads to remarkable enhancement in the photoluminescence efficiency, which opens up new opportunities for the optoelectronic applications of the material. Here we report differential reflectance and photoluminescence (PL) spectra of mono- to few-layer WS2 and WSe2 that indicate that the band structure of these materials undergoes similar indirect to direct transition when thinned to a single monolayer. Strong enhancement in PL quantum yield is observed for monoayer WS2 and WSe2 due to exciton recombination at the direct band edge. In contrast to natural MoS2 crystals extensively used in recent studies, few-layer WS2 and WSe2 show comparatively strong indirect gap emission along with distinct direct gap hot electron emission, suggesting high quality of synthetic crystals prepared by chemical vapor transport method. Fine absorption and emission features and their thickness dependence suggest strong effect of Se p-orbitals on the d electron band structure as well as interlayer coupling in WSe2.
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