Abstract

The ideal quantum confinement structure of monolayer semiconductors offers prominent optical modulation capabilities that are mediated by enhanced many-body interactions. Herein, we establish an electrolyte-gating method for tuning the luminescence properties that are in transition metal dichalcogenide (TMDC) monolayers. We fabricate electric double-layer capacitors on TMDC/graphite heterostructures to investigate electric-field- and carrier-density-dependent photoluminescence. The exciton peak energy initially shows a slight quadratic red shift of ∼1 meV without carrier accumulations, which is caused by the quantum-confined Stark effect. In contrast, the exciton resonance exhibits a larger red shift up to 10 meV with the accumulated carrier density above 1013 cm-2. These results indicate that the optical transitions can be largely modulated by the carrier density control in S- and Se-based TMDCs, as triggered by the doping-induced band gap renormalization effect. To further inspire this modulation capability, we also apply our method to electrolyte-based TMDC light-emitting devices. Biasing solely in electrolyte-induced p-i-n junctions yields pronounced red shifts up to 40 meV for exciton and trion electroluminescence. Consequently, our approach reveals that the doping effects in the high-carrier-density regimes are potentially significant for efficient optical modulation in monolayer semiconductors.

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