Publications by authors named "Trevor B Arp"

Graphene and transition metal dichalcogenide flat-band systems show similar phase diagrams, replete with magnetic and superconducting phases. An abiding question has been whether magnetic ordering competes with superconductivity or facilitates pairing. For example, recent studies of Bernal bilayer graphene in the presence of enhanced spin-orbit coupling show a substantial increase in the observed domain and critical temperature T of superconducting states; however, the mechanism for this enhancement remains unknown.

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Stack engineering, an atomic-scale metamaterial strategy, enables the design of optical and electronic properties in van der Waals heterostructure devices. Here we reveal the optoelectronic effects of stacking-induced strong coupling between atomic motion and interlayer excitons in WSe/MoSe heterojunction photodiodes. To do so, we introduce the photocurrent spectroscopy of a stack-engineered photodiode as a sensitive technique for probing interlayer excitons, enabling access to vibronic states typically found only in molecule-like systems.

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Photosynthesis achieves near unity light-harvesting quantum efficiency yet it remains unknown whether there exists a fundamental organizing principle giving rise to robust light harvesting in the presence of dynamic light conditions and noisy physiological environments. Here, we present a noise-canceling network model that relates noisy physiological conditions, power conversion efficiency, and the resulting absorption spectra of photosynthetic organisms. Using light conditions in full solar exposure, light filtered by oxygenic phototrophs, and light filtered under seawater, we derived optimal absorption characteristics for efficient solar power conversion.

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Quantum devices made from van der Waals (vdW) heterostructures of two dimensional (2D) materials may herald a new frontier in designer materials that exhibit novel electronic properties and unusual electronic phases. However, due to the complexity of layered atomic structures and the physics that emerges, experimental realization of devices with tailored physical properties will require comprehensive measurements across a large domain of material and device parameters. Such multi-parameter measurements require new strategies that combine data-intensive techniques-often applied in astronomy and high energy physics-with the experimental tools of solid state physics and materials science.

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Manipulating the flow of energy in nanoscale and molecular photonic devices is of both fundamental interest and central importance for applications in light energy harvesting optoelectronics. Under erratic solar irradiance conditions, unregulated power fluctuations in a light-harvesting photocell lead to inefficient energy storage in conventional solar cells and potentially fatal oxidative damage in photosynthesis. Here, we compare the theoretical minimum energy fluctuations in nanoscale quantum heat engine photocells that incorporate one or two photon-absorbing channels and show that fluctuations are naturally suppressed in the two-channel photocell.

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