Light-induced shift current vortex crystals in moiré heterobilayers

Author:

Hu Chen12ORCID,Naik Mit H.12,Chan Yang-Hao123ORCID,Ruan Jiawei12,Louie Steven G.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720

2. Materials Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720

3. Institute of Atomic and Molecular Sciences, Academia Sinica, and Physics Division, National Center for Theoretical Sciences, Taipei 10617, Taiwan

Abstract

Transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) moiré superlattices provide an emerging platform to explore various light-induced phenomena. Recently, the discoveries of novel moiré excitons have attracted great interest. The nonlinear optical responses of these systems are however still underexplored. Here, we report investigation of light-induced shift currents (a second-order response generating DC current from optical illumination) in the WSe 2 /WS 2 moiré superlattice. We identify a striking phenomenon of the formation of shift current vortex crystals—i.e., two-dimensional periodic arrays of moiré-scale current vortices and associated magnetic fields with remarkable intensity under laboratory laser setup. Furthermore, we demonstrate high optical tunability of these current vortices—their location, shape, chirality, and magnitude can be tuned by the frequency, polarization, and intensity of the incident light. Electron-hole interactions (excitonic effects) are found to play a crucial role in the generation and nature of the shift current intensity and distribution. Our findings provide a promising all-optical control route to manipulate nanoscale shift current density distributions and magnetic field patterns, as well as shed light on nonlinear optical responses in moiré quantum matter and their possible applications.

Funder

DOE | NNSA | LDRD | AL | Division of Materials Sciences and Engineering

National Science Foundation

National Science and Technology Council of Taiwan

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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