Crystal symmetry governs the nature of electronic Bloch states. For example, in the presence of time-reversal symmetry, the orbital magnetic moment and Berry curvature of the Bloch states must vanish unless inversion symmetry is broken. In certain two-dimensional electron systems such as bilayer graphene, the intrinsic inversion symmetry can be broken simply by applying a perpendicular electric field. In principle, this offers the possibility of switching on/off and continuously tuning the magnetic moment and Berry curvature near the Dirac valleys by reversible electrical control. Here we investigate this possibility using polarization-resolved photoluminescence of bilayer MoS 2 , which has the same symmetry as bilayer graphene but has a bandgap in the visible spectrum allowing direct optical probing. We find that in bilayer MoS 2 the circularly polarized photoluminescence can be continuously tuned from-15% to 15% as a function of gate voltage, whereas in structurally non-centrosymmetric monolayer MoS 2 the photoluminescence polarization is gate independent. The observations are well explained as resulting from the continuous variation of orbital magnetic moments between positive and negative values through symmetry control. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Wu, S., Ross, J. S., Liu, G. B., Aivazian, G., Jones, A., Fei, Z., … Xu, X. (2013). Electrical tuning of valley magnetic moment through symmetry control in bilayer MoS 2. Nature Physics, 9(3), 149–153. https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys2524
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