Excitonic Mott insulator in a Bose-Fermi-Hubbard system of moiré WS₂/WSe₂ heterobilayer

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Citation of Original Publication

Gao, Beini, Daniel G. Suárez-Forero, Supratik Sarkar, et al. “Excitonic Mott insulator in a Bose-Fermi-Hubbard system of moiré WS₂/WSe₂ heterobilayer.” Nature Communications 15, no. 1 (2024): 2305. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-46616-x.

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Attribution 4.0 International

Abstract

Understanding the Hubbard model is crucial for investigating various quantum many-body states and its fermionic and bosonic versions have been largely realized separately. Recently, transition metal dichalcogenides heterobilayers have emerged as a promising platform for simulating the rich physics of the Hubbard model. In this work, we explore the interplay between fermionic and bosonic populations, using a WS₂/WSe₂ heterobilayer device that hosts this hybrid particle density. We independently tune the fermionic and bosonic populations by electronic doping and optical injection of electron-hole pairs, respectively. This enables us to form strongly interacting excitons that are manifested in a large energy gap in the photoluminescence spectrum. The incompressibility of excitons is further corroborated by observing a suppression of exciton diffusion with increasing pump intensity, as opposed to the expected behavior of a weakly interacting gas of bosons, suggesting the formation of a bosonic Mott insulator. We explain our observations using a two-band model including phase space filling. Our system provides a controllable approach to the exploration of quantum many-body effects in the generalized Bose-Fermi-Hubbard model.