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Journal Article

Signatures of excitonic insulating state in monolayer 1T-ZrTe2

The excitonic insulator (EI) is a Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) of excitons bound by electron-hole interaction in a solid, which could support high-temperature BEC transition. The material realization of EI has been challenged by the difficulty of distinguishing it from a conventional charge density wave (CDW) state. In the BEC limit, the preformed exciton gas phase is a hallmark to distinguish EI from conventional CDW, yet direct experimental evidence has been lacking. Here we report a distinct correlated phase beyond the 2×2 CDW ground state emerging in monolayer 1T-ZrTe2 and its investigation by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). The results show novel band- and energy-dependent folding behavior in a two-step process, which is the signatures of an exciton gas phase prior to its condensation into the final CDW state. Our findings provide a versatile two-dimensional platform that allows tuning of the excitonic effect.

Author(s)
Yekai Song
Chunjing Jia
Hongyu Xiong
Binbin Wang
Zhicheng Jiang
Kui Huang
Jinwoong Hwang
Zhuojun Li
Choongyu Hwang
Zhongkai Liu
Dawei Shen
Jonathan Sobota
Patrick Kirchmann
Jiamin Xue
Thomas P. Devereaux
Sung-Kwan Mo
Zhi-Xun Shen
Shujie Tang
Journal Name
Nature Communications
Publication Date
February 27, 2023
DOI
10.1038/s41467-023-36857-7