Quantum-confined semiconductors provide highly tunable optical and electrical properties for a wide variety of emerging applications. Two-dimensional semiconductors possess tunable bandgaps, high charge carrier mobilities, and strong light-matter interactions that can enable applications in photovoltaics, quantum information processing, and spintronics. Electronic doping, the intentional introduction of controlled charge carrier density and type (electrons or holes) is a fundamental enabler for many emerging applications of two-dimensional semiconductors. While electrostatic doping in transistor geometries is useful for certain applications, it is important to develop additional methods based on e.g. molecular redox doping and substitutional atomic doping that can provide tunable Fermi level control in the absence of an applied bias. In this presentation, I will discuss our efforts to develop such doping strategies for a variety of two-dimensional semiconductors. I will discuss how electronic doping modulates opto-electronic properties, including ground-state absorbance, charge transport, and excited-state dynamics in these 2D semiconductors. These studies provide fundamental insights into the degree to which molecular and substitutional doping strategies can modulate Fermi level, charge transport, and excitonic optical transitions in 2D semiconductors.
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