Spin-valley locking for in-gap quantum dots in a MoS2 transistor

Abstract

Spins confined to atomically-thin semiconductors are being actively explored as quantum information carriers. In transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs), the hexagonal crystal lattice gives rise to an additional valley degree of freedom with spin-valley locking and potentially enhanced spin life- and coherence times. However, realizing well-separated single-particle levels, and achieving transparent electrical contact to address them has remained challenging. Here, we report well-defined spin states in a few-layer MoS 2 transistor, characterized with a spectral resolution of 50~μeV at Tel = 150~mK. Ground state magnetospectroscopy confirms a finite Berry-curvature induced coupling of spin and valley, reflected in a pronounced Zeeman anisotropy, with a large out-of-plane g-factor of g 8. A finite in-plane g-factor (g 0.55-0.8) allows us to quantify spin-valley locking and estimate the spin-orbit splitting 2 SO 100~μeV. The demonstration of spin-valley locking is an important milestone towards realizing spin-valley quantum bits.

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