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1.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 8(42): 28809-28815, 2016 Oct 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27718557

RESUMO

Monolayer transition-metal dichalcogenides (1L-TMDs) are atomically thin direct band gap semiconductors, from which the emission of light is determined by optical transitions of exciton complexes such as neutral excitons and trions. While the quantum yields of 1L-TMDs are quite low, the ability to control the populations of exciton complexes in 1L-TMDs through various doping processes is an interesting advantage, and provides ample possibilities for engineering the optical properties of these semiconductor monolayers. Here we demonstrate a simple method of controlling the populations of excitons and trions to enhance the light emission of 1L-TMDs by having them form heterostructures with ZnO thin films (TFs). 1Ls of MoS2 or MoSe2 showed up to 17-fold increases in photoluminescence (PL) when they were placed on ∼50 nm thick ZnO TFs. This enhancement of the PL was due to charge exchanges occurring through the 1L-TMD/ZnO interface. The PL enhancements and changes in the PL spectra of the 1L-TMDs were greater when the 1L-TMD/ZnO heterostructures were subjected to 355 nm wavelength laser excitation than when they were excited with a 514 nm wavelength laser, which we attributed to the onset of energy transfer by photoexcited excitons and/or the additional p-doping by photoexcited holes in ZnO. The p-doping phenomenon and the enhanced light emission of 1L-TMD/ZnO heterostructures were unambiguously visualized in spatially resolved PL and Raman spectral maps. Our approach using the 1L-TMD/ZnO TF heterostructure suggests that a rich variety of options for engineering the optical properties of 1L-TMDs may be made available by carrying out simple and intuitive manipulations of exciton complexes, and these endeavors may yield practical applications for 1L-TMDs in nanophotonic devices.

2.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 80(1 Pt 2): 017301, 2009 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19658842

RESUMO

We provide an observation suggesting a strong correlation between helicity and enstrophy in fluid turbulence. Helicity statistics were obtained in a direct numerical simulation of forced isotropic turbulence. An investigation of coherent structures revealed that intermittently large local helicity was found in the core region of the coherent rotational structures, thus showing a strong correlation with local enstrophy, not dissipation. Statistics regarding the relative helicity and the correlation between velocity and vorticity conditioned on different levels of enstrophy clearly suggest that velocity and vorticity tend to be aligned in the core of the coherent structures.

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