Transition process of PtSe2 from semiconductor to semimetal and its optical features

Update time: 2019-08-16

The demand for an ultrabroad optical material with a bandgap tunable from zero to at least 1~2 eV has been one of the driving forces for exploring new two-dimensional (2D) materials since the emergence of graphene, transition metal dichalcogenides and black phosphorus. As an ultra-broadband 2D material with energy bandgap ranging from 0 to 1.2 eV, PtSe2 shows much better air stability than its analogue, black phosphorous. Although the angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) technique and field-effect transistor electrical measurements have been used to investigate PtSe2, the exact transition point from semiconductor to semimetal is still in controversy.

Recently, a study led by Prof. WANG Jun from Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, investigated the superior nonlinear optical performance, ultrafast dynamics of layered PtSe2 and revealed its evolution signature from semiconductor to semimetal. This study has been published online and selected to be featured on the inside front cover of Laser & Photonics Reviews.

In their experiment, PtSe2 films with different thicknesses ranging from 4 layers to 55 layers were synthesized by a thermally assisted conversion process. The nonlinear optical performance and ultrafast dynamics were studied using the pump probe technique with 380 fs laser pulses at 1040 nm with a repetition rate of 1000 Hz.
On the basis of nonlinear absorption results, it can be concluded that the bandgaps of all PtSe2 films are less than the excitation photon energy (1.20 eV), while the difference emerges in the ultrafast dynamics results.

The basic principle is that the different nonlinear absorption signatures can reflect significantly the competition between the bandgap and the photon energy. For instance, the observation of two-photon absorption implies the bandgap is larger than the photon energy used, while saturable absorption implies the bandgap is smaller than the photon energy. Another crucial judgement basis lies in the lifetime of excited carriers, as it is on the different order of magnitudes for semiconductor and semimetal.

They provide a viewpoint to characterize the semiconductor to semimetal transition from the perspectives of nonlinear optics and ultrafast dynamics based on a systematic investigation of samples with different thicknesses.

This study clearly demonstrates the evolution of nonlinear absorption and carrier dynamics with increasing layer thickness in PtSe2, indicating its promising potential in nanophotonic devices such as infrared detector, optical switches and saturable absorber.

This work is supported by the Chinese National Natural Science Foundation, the Strategic Priority Research Program of CAS, the Key Research Program of Frontier Science of CAS, the Program of Shanghai Academic Research Leader, Natural Science Foundation of Shanghai, Youth Innovation Promotion Association and President’s International Fellowship Initiative.

 

Fig.1 Ultrafast dynamics evolution from semiconductor to semimetal in PtSe2

 

Figure 2. Inside front cover

Related website:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/lpor.201970033
Contact
:
Mr. Cao Yong
General Administrative Office
Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics, CAS
Email: caoyong@siom.ac.cn

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