Strain Correlated Linearly Polarized Photoluminescence in WS2/WSe2 Moir\'e Superlattices
Abstract
Reliable optical control of valley degrees of freedom in moir\'e excitons requires that the emitted polarization faithfully reflect the underlying valley state. Here, we show that linearly polarized photoluminescence from WSe2/WS2 moir\'e excitons is largely insensitive to the excitation polarization and therefore does not arise from valley coherence. Automated polarization-resolved photoluminescence and Raman mapping at cryogenic temperature reveals that the degree of linear polarization correlates strongly with local Raman shifts and moir\'e-exciton observables, identifying strain as the dominant experimental correlate. Linear-regression analysis further shows that strain-related descriptors provide the best prediction of the observed polarization. Guided by theory, we attribute this behavior to strain-amplified breaking of C3 symmetry in the moir\'e potential: weak uniaxial strain produces only partial cancellation of locally elliptical emission, yielding a finite far-field degree of linear polarization. These results establish strain as a key control parameter for reliable optical readout in TMD moir\'e superlattices.
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