Correlated exciton fluctuations in a two-dimensional semiconductor on a metal.
2020
Excitons in nanoscale
materials can exhibit fluorescence fluctuations.
Intermittency is pervasive in zero-dimensional emitters such as single
molecules and quantum dots. In contrast, two-dimensional semiconductors
are generally regarded as stable light sources. Noise contains, however,
valuable information about a material. Here, we demonstrate fluorescence
fluctuations in a monolayer semiconductor due to sensitivity to its
nanoscopic environment focusing on the case of a metal film. The fluctuations
are spatially correlated over tens of micrometers and follow power-law
statistics, with simultaneous changes in emission intensity and lifetime.
At low temperatures, an additional spectral contribution from interface
trap states emerges with fluctuations that are correlated with neutral
excitons and anticorrelated with trions. Mastering exciton fluctuations
has implications for light-emitting devices such as single-photon
sources and could lead to novel excitonic sensors. The quantification
of fluorescence fluctuations, including imaging, unlocks a set of
promising tools to characterize and exploit two-dimensional semiconductors
and their interfaces.
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