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Dive into the research topics where Malte Selig is active.

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Featured researches published by Malte Selig.


Nature Communications | 2016

Excitonic linewidth and coherence lifetime in monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides

Malte Selig; Gunnar Berghäuser; Archana Raja; Philipp Nagler; Christian Schüller; Tony F. Heinz; Tobias Korn; Alexey Chernikov; Ermin Malic; Andreas Knorr

Atomically thin transition metal dichalcogenides are direct-gap semiconductors with strong light–matter and Coulomb interactions. The latter accounts for tightly bound excitons, which dominate their optical properties. Besides the optically accessible bright excitons, these systems exhibit a variety of dark excitonic states. They are not visible in the optical spectra, but can strongly influence the coherence lifetime and the linewidth of the emission from bright exciton states. Here, we investigate the microscopic origin of the excitonic coherence lifetime in two representative materials (WS2 and MoSe2) through a study combining microscopic theory with spectroscopic measurements. We show that the excitonic coherence lifetime is determined by phonon-induced intravalley scattering and intervalley scattering into dark excitonic states. In particular, in WS2, we identify exciton relaxation processes involving phonon emission into lower-lying dark states that are operative at all temperatures.


Nano Letters | 2016

Ultrafast Coulomb-Induced Intervalley Coupling in Atomically Thin WS2

Robert Schmidt; Gunnar Berghäuser; Robert J. Schneider; Malte Selig; Philipp Tonndorf; Ermin Malic; Andreas Knorr; Steffen Michaelis de Vasconcellos; Rudolf Bratschitsch

Monolayers of semiconducting transition metal dichalcogenides hold the promise for a new paradigm in electronics by exploiting the valley degree of freedom in addition to charge and spin. For MoS2, WS2, and WSe2, valley polarization can be conveniently initialized and read out by circularly polarized light. However, the underlying microscopic processes governing valley polarization in these atomically thin equivalents of graphene are still not fully understood. Here, we present a joint experiment-theory study on the ultrafast time-resolved intervalley dynamics in monolayer WS2. Based on a microscopic theory, we reveal the many-particle mechanisms behind the observed spectral features. We show that Coulomb-induced intervalley coupling explains the immediate and prominent pump-probe signal in the unpumped valley and the seemingly low valley polarization degrees typically observed in pump-probe measurements compared to photoluminescence studies. The gained insights are also applicable to other light-emitting monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides, such as MoS2 and WSe2, where the Coulomb-induced intervalley coupling also determines the initial carrier dynamics.


Nano Letters | 2018

Strain Control of Exciton–Phonon Coupling in Atomically Thin Semiconductors

Iris Niehues; Robert Schmidt; Matthias Drüppel; Philipp Marauhn; Dominik Christiansen; Malte Selig; Gunnar Berghäuser; Daniel Wigger; Robert Schneider; Lisa Braasch; Rouven Koch; Andres Castellanos-Gomez; Tilmann Kuhn; Andreas Knorr; Ermin Malic; Michael Rohlfing; Steffen Michaelis de Vasconcellos; Rudolf Bratschitsch

Semiconducting transition metal dichalcogenide (TMDC) monolayers have exceptional physical properties. They show bright photoluminescence due to their unique band structure and absorb more than 10% of the light at their excitonic resonances despite their atomic thickness. At room temperature, the width of the exciton transitions is governed by the exciton-phonon interaction leading to strongly asymmetric line shapes. TMDC monolayers are also extremely flexible, sustaining mechanical strain of about 10% without breaking. The excitonic properties strongly depend on strain. For example, exciton energies of TMDC monolayers significantly redshift under uniaxial tensile strain. Here, we demonstrate that the width and the asymmetric line shape of excitonic resonances in TMDC monolayers can be controlled with applied strain. We measure photoluminescence and absorption spectra of the A exciton in monolayer MoSe2, WSe2, WS2, and MoS2 under uniaxial tensile strain. We find that the A exciton substantially narrows and becomes more symmetric for the selenium-based monolayer materials, while no change is observed for atomically thin WS2. For MoS2 monolayers, the line width increases. These effects are due to a modified exciton-phonon coupling at increasing strain levels because of changes in the electronic band structure of the respective monolayer materials. This interpretation based on steady-state experiments is corroborated by time-resolved photoluminescence measurements. Our results demonstrate that moderate strain values on the order of only 1% are already sufficient to globally tune the exciton-phonon interaction in TMDC monolayers and hold the promise for controlling the coupling on the nanoscale.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Phonon Sidebands in Monolayer Transition Metal Dichalcogenides

Dominik Christiansen; Malte Selig; Gunnar Berghäuser; Robert Schmidt; Iris Niehues; Robert Schneider; Ashish Arora; S. M. de Vasconcellos; Rudolf Bratschitsch; Ermin Malic; Andreas Knorr

Excitons dominate the optical properties of monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs). Besides optically accessible bright exciton states, TMDs exhibit also a multitude of optically forbidden dark excitons. Here, we show that efficient exciton-phonon scattering couples bright and dark states and gives rise to an asymmetric excitonic line shape. The observed asymmetry can be traced back to phonon-induced sidebands that are accompanied by a polaron redshift. We present a joint theory-experiment study investigating the microscopic origin of these sidebands in different TMD materials taking into account intra- and intervalley scattering channels opened by optical and acoustic phonons. The gained insights contribute to a better understanding of the optical fingerprint of these technologically promising nanomaterials.


Nano Letters | 2018

Dielectric Engineering of Electronic Correlations in a van der Waals Heterostructure

Philipp Steinleitner; Alexander Graf; Philipp Nagler; Kenji Watanabe; Takashi Taniguchi; Jonas Zipfel; Christian Schüller; Tobias Korn; Alexey Chernikov; Samuel Brem; Malte Selig; Gunnar Berghäuser; Ermin Malic; Rupert Huber

Heterostructures of van der Waals bonded layered materials offer unique means to tailor dielectric screening with atomic-layer precision, opening a fertile field of fundamental research. The optical analyses used so far have relied on interband spectroscopy. Here we demonstrate how a capping layer of hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) renormalizes the internal structure of excitons in a WSe2 monolayer using intraband transitions. Ultrabroadband terahertz probes sensitively map out the full complex-valued mid-infrared conductivity of the heterostructure after optical injection of 1s A excitons. This approach allows us to trace the energies and line widths of the atom-like 1s-2p transition of optically bright and dark excitons as well as the densities of these quasiparticles. The excitonic resonance red shifts and narrows in the WSe2/hBN heterostructure compared to the bare monolayer. Furthermore, the ultrafast temporal evolution of the mid-infrared response function evidences the formation of optically dark excitons from an initial bright population. Our results provide key insight into the effect of nonlocal screening on electron-hole correlations and open new possibilities of dielectric engineering of van der Waals heterostructures.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Exciton Relaxation Cascade in two-dimensional Transition Metal Dichalcogenides

Samuel Brem; Malte Selig; Gunnar Berghaeuser; Ermin Malic

Monolayers of transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are characterized by an extraordinarily strong Coulomb interaction giving rise to tightly bound excitons with binding energies of hundreds of meV. Excitons dominate the optical response as well as the ultrafast dynamics in TMDs. As a result, a microscopic understanding of exciton dynamics is the key for a technological application of these materials. In spite of this immense importance, elementary processes guiding the formation and relaxation of excitons after optical excitation of an electron-hole plasma has remained unexplored to a large extent. Here, we provide a fully quantum mechanical description of momentum- and energy-resolved exciton dynamics in monolayer molybdenum diselenide (MoSe2) including optical excitation, formation of excitons, radiative recombination as well as phonon-induced cascade-like relaxation down to the excitonic ground state. Based on the gained insights, we reveal experimentally measurable features in pump-probe spectra providing evidence for the exciton relaxation cascade.


arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2018

Impact of strain on the excitonic linewidth in transition metal dichalcogenides

Zahra Khatibi; Maja Feierabend; Malte Selig; Samuel Brem; Christopher Linderälv; Paul Erhart; Ermin Malic

Monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are known to be highly sensitive to externally applied tensile or compressive strain. In particular, strain can be exploited as a tool to control the optical response of TMDs. However, the role of excitonic effects under strain has not been fully understood yet. Utilizing the strain-induced modification of electron and phonon dispersion obtained by first principle calculations, we present in this work microscopic insights into the strain-dependent optical response of various TMD materials. We show that the different changes in the excitonic linewidth of diverse TMD monolayers are due to the strain-induced modification of the relative spectral position of bright and dark excitonic states. Our theoretical results explain well the observed partially opposite changes in the excitonic linewidth of different TMDs at room temperature. Furthermore, we predict the linewidth behavior of excitonic resonances in strained TMDs for tensile and compressive strain at low temperatures.


Physical Review Materials | 2018

Molecule signatures in photoluminescence spectra of transition metal dichalcogenides

Maja Feierabend; Gunnar Berghäuser; Malte Selig; Samuel Brem; Timur Shegai; Siegfried Eigler; Ermin Malic

Monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) show an optimal surface-to-volume ratio and are thus promising candidates for novel molecule sensor devices. It was recently predicted that a certain class of molecules exhibiting a large dipole moment can be detected through the activation of optically inaccessible (dark) excitonic states in absorption spectra of tungsten-based TMDs. In this paper, we investigate the molecule signatures in photoluminescence spectra in dependence of a number of different experimentally accessible quantities, such as excitation density, temperature, as well as molecular characteristics including the dipole moment and its orientation, molecule-TMD distance, molecular coverage, and distribution. We show that under certain optimal conditions even room-temperature detection of molecules can be achieved.


Nature Communications | 2018

The role of momentum-dark excitons in the elementary optical response of bilayer WSe 2

Jessica Lindlau; Malte Selig; Andre Neumann; Léo Colombier; Jonathan Förste; Victor Funk; Michael Förg; Jonghwan Kim; Gunnar Berghäuser; Takashi Taniguchi; Kenji Watanabe; Feng Wang; Ermin Malic; Alexander Högele

Monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) undergo substantial changes in the single-particle band structure and excitonic optical response upon the addition of just one layer. As opposed to the single-layer limit, the bandgap of bilayer (BL) TMD semiconductors is indirect which results in reduced photoluminescence with richly structured spectra that have eluded a detailed understanding to date. Here, we provide a closed interpretation of cryogenic emission from BL WSe2 as a representative material for the wider class of TMD semiconductors. By combining theoretical calculations with comprehensive spectroscopy experiments, we identify the crucial role of momentum-indirect excitons for the understanding of BL TMD emission. Our results shed light on the origin of quantum dot formation in BL crystals and will facilitate further advances directed at opto-electronic applications of layered TMD semiconductors in van der Waals heterostructures and devices.The electronic band structure of atomically thin transition metal dichalcogenides is strongly sensitive to the number of layers, resulting in modified light emission. Here, the authors investigate the cryogenic emission from bilayer WSe2 to identify the role of momentum-indirect excitons for its optical response.


2D Materials | 2018

Dark and bright exciton formation, thermalization, and photoluminescence in monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides

Malte Selig; Gunnar Berghäuser; Marten Richter; Rudolf Bratschitsch; Andreas Knorr; Ermin Malic

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Ermin Malic

Chalmers University of Technology

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Gunnar Berghäuser

Chalmers University of Technology

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Andreas Knorr

Technical University of Berlin

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Samuel Brem

Chalmers University of Technology

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Maja Feierabend

Chalmers University of Technology

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Paul Erhart

Chalmers University of Technology

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Dominik Christiansen

Technical University of Berlin

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