ArXiv TLDR

Light-controlled van der Waals tunnel junctions: mechanisms, architectures, functionalities, and opportunities

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2604.08399

Mohamed Shehabeldin, Xuguo Zhou, Ran Li, Pablo Jarillo-Herrero, Yuxuan Cosmi Lin + 2 more

cond-mat.mes-hall

TLDR

This review explores light-controlled van der Waals tunnel junctions, detailing their mechanisms, architectures, functionalities, and future opportunities.

Key contributions

  • Reviews fundamental mechanisms of photo-assisted transport in vdW tunnel junctions.
  • Explores how vdW junctions enable electrical access to nonequilibrium dynamics and excitations.
  • Discusses emerging functionalities like photodetection, light emission, sensing, and memory.
  • Highlights future opportunities including quantum-geometric probes and scalable architectures.

Why it matters

This review provides a comprehensive overview of light-controlled van der Waals tunnel junctions, a powerful platform for quantum transport. It details current capabilities and future opportunities, crucial for advancing quantum materials and next-generation devices.

Original Abstract

The phenomenon of electron tunneling has long been central to quantum transport and continues to provide a powerful framework for understanding and controlling electronic processes in solids. When combined with optical excitation, tunneling becomes a particularly rich platform for experiments, because light can drive nonequilibrium carrier populations and open transport pathways that are inaccessible without optical excitation. The emergence of van der Waals (vdW) materials has greatly expanded this opportunity by enabling atomically thin heterostructures with clean interfaces, engineered barriers, and highly tunable band alignment. In this review, we discuss the fundamental mechanisms of photo-assisted transport and the realization of vdW tunnel junctions, and show how they provide electrical access to nonequilibrium dynamics and collective excitations in quantum materials. We further examine emerging functionalities including photodetection, tunneling-driven light emission, sensing, and memory. Finally, we present a forward-looking perspective on new opportunities such as quantum-geometric probes, twist-resolved spectroscopy, moire ferroelectricity, and scalable architectures for computing and sensing.

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