Abstract

Reduced dielectric screening in two-dimensional materials enables bound excitons, which modifies their optical absorption and optoelectronic response. Here, we demonstrate the existence of excitons in the bandgap of the monolayer family of the newly discovered synthetic (Z=N, P, and As) series of materials. All three monolayers support several bright and strongly bound excitons with binding energies varying from 1 eV to 1.35 eV for the lowest energy exciton resonances. We show that on increasing the pump fluence or photo-excited carrier density, the lowest energy exciton first undergoes a redshift followed by a blueshift, due to the renormalized exciton binding energies. The exciton binding energy varies as a Lennard-Jones-like potential as a function of the inter-exciton spacing. This establishes an atom-like attractive and repulsive interaction between excitons depending on the inter-exciton separation. Our study shows that the series of monolayers offer an exciting test-bed for exploring the physics of strongly bound excitons and their non-equilibrium dynamics.

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