Reversed charge transfer in a type I MoS2/PtSe2 heterostructure probed by ultrafast two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy†
Abstract
Charge transfer processes are crucial for determining the optoelectronic properties of heterostructures constructed from atomically thin transition metal dichalcogenides. Despite significant studies of the resulting inter-layer excitons in type II heterostructures, much less is known about the charge transfer mechanism and dynamics in type I heterostructures. Here, we reveal a two-step reversed charge transfer process in a type I MoS2/PtSe2 heterostructure using ultrafast two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy with a broadband pulse that simultaneously excites MoS2 and PtSe2. Unique cross-peaks located at low excitation energy and high detection energy indicate primary hot carrier transfer within 1 ps and secondary Auger-assisted carrier transfer occurring between 6 and 100 ps from the small bandgap PtSe2 to the large bandgap MoS2. This charge transfer creates an out-of-plane interfacial electric field across the heterostructure interface, which dynamically blue shifts the exciton energy of MoS2via the combined effect of the Stark effect and the reduction of exciton binding energy. Charge transfer from the large bandgap MoS2 to the small bandgap PtSe2 is found to be not significant, possibly due to the resonant optical excitation that creates strongly bound excitons in the MoS2 layer, making the forward charge transfer inefficient. The results demonstrate the opportunity for functional optoelectronic and photocatalytic materials with type I band alignment under sub-bandgap excitation conditions by making use of the characteristics of hot carriers generated by low energy photons.