Abstract

The emerging field of valleytronics aims to coherently manipulate an electron and/or hole’s valley pseudospin as an information bearing degree of freedom (DOF). Monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides, due to their strongly bound excitons, their degenerate valleys and their seamless interfacing with photons are a promising candidate for room temperature valleytronics. Although the exciton binding energy suggests room temperature valley coherence should be possible, it has been elusive to-date. A potential solution involves the formation of half-light, half-matter cavity polaritons based on 2D material excitons. It has recently been discovered that cavity polaritons can inherit the valley DOF. Here, we demonstrate the room temperature valley coherence of valley-polaritons by embedding a monolayer of tungsten diselenide in a monolithic dielectric cavity. The extra decay path introduced by the exciton-cavity coupling, which is free from decoherence, is the key to room temperature valley coherence preservation. These observations paves the way for practical valleytronic devices.

Highlights

  • The emerging field of valleytronics aims to coherently manipulate an electron and/or hole’s valley pseudospin as an information bearing degree of freedom (DOF)

  • It has been discovered that transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDC) polaritons inherit the valley DOF and exhibit enhanced valley polarization at elevated temperature[19,20,21,22]

  • Our results provide a path to realizing room-temperature valleytronic devices

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Summary

Introduction

The emerging field of valleytronics aims to coherently manipulate an electron and/or hole’s valley pseudospin as an information bearing degree of freedom (DOF). The extra decay path introduced by the exciton-cavity coupling, which is free from decoherence, is the key to room temperature valley coherence preservation. These observations paves the way for practical valleytronic devices. 1234567890():,; Nanoscale materials have attracted much attention in recent years for their potential to enable optoelectronic device architectures Among these are monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDC)[1,2]. In this work we leverage polaritons based on the monolayer tungsten diselenide (WSe2) to circumvent intervalley dephasing and preserve finite valley coherence at room temperature. Our results provide a path to realizing room-temperature valleytronic devices

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