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MoS 2 and Perylene Derivative Based Type‐II Heterostructure: Bandgap Engineering and Giant Photoluminescence Enhancement
Author(s) -
Obaidulla Sk Md,
Habib Mohammad Rezwan,
Khan Yahya,
Kong Yuhan,
Liang Tao,
Xu Mingsheng
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
advanced materials interfaces
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.671
H-Index - 65
ISSN - 2196-7350
DOI - 10.1002/admi.201901197
Subject(s) - trion , photoluminescence , heterojunction , materials science , exciton , optoelectronics , band gap , molybdenum disulfide , quenching (fluorescence) , nanotechnology , optics , condensed matter physics , physics , fluorescence , metallurgy
2D transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are a promising material system for optoelectronic applications. However, their key figure of merit, the room‐temperature photoluminescence (PL), is extremely low. To overcome this challenge, TMDs need interfacing with other semiconducting materials and discover the underlying physical phenomena. Herein, the optical properties and PL mechanisms of molybdenum disulfide‐organic perylene derivative (PDI/MoS 2 ) based type‐II heterostructures, i.e., PTCDA/MoS 2 and PTCDI‐Ph/MoS 2 , are studied experimentally and theoretically. The PL of MoS 2 in PTCDA/MoS 2 is enhanced, while a dramatic PL quenching of MoS 2 is observed on PTCDI‐Ph/MoS 2 . The significant radiative PL enhancement of PTCDA/MoS 2 is primarily due to the bandgap reduction, high exciton/trion ratio, and epitaxial growth of PTCDA. In contrast, “trap‐like” states in heterointerface, relatively low exciton/trion ratio, and less ordered morphology are responsible for PL quenching of PTCDI‐Ph/MoS 2 heterostructure. These findings would provoke a new way to engineer the light‐matter interactions in organic/TMD hybrids, which enables light‐emitting, light‐harvesting applications, and neuromorphic devices.

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