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arxiv: 2604.17409 · v1 · submitted 2026-04-19 · ❄️ cond-mat.mtrl-sci

Localized Exciton Emission with Spontaneous Circular Polarization in NiPS3/WSe2 Heterostructures

Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 05:35 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ❄️ cond-mat.mtrl-sci
keywords 2D heterostructuresexcitonscircular polarizationmagnetic proximity effectNiPS3WSe2valley polarizationvan der Waals interfaces
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The pith

Localized excitons in NiPS3/WSe2 heterostructures emit light with spontaneous circular polarization without external magnetic fields.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper studies the low-temperature optical response of few-layer NiPS3/WSe2 van der Waals heterostructures using micro-photoluminescence and magneto-photoluminescence spectroscopy. Multiple sharp excitonic peaks emerge that are absent in the isolated materials, which the authors attribute to intralayer WSe2 excitons localized by interface-induced potentials. These peaks display circular polarization in zero applied field, interpreted as a magnetic proximity effect from uncompensated spins at the NiPS3 interface. Magneto-PL data show nonlinear Zeeman splitting consistent with an interfacial exchange field, while DFT calculations support the intralayer assignment and show modified spin textures from hybridization. The results indicate that pairing a 2D semiconductor with a layered antiferromagnet can control valley polarization and spin degrees of freedom.

Core claim

In NiPS3/WSe2 heterostructures, sharp excitonic emission lines appear that do not exist in the separate layers. These lines arise from intralayer WSe2 excitons confined by interface potentials. The emission exhibits spontaneous circular polarization with no external magnetic field applied, which is taken as evidence of a magnetic proximity effect produced by uncompensated spins at the NiPS3 interface. Magneto-photoluminescence measurements reveal nonlinear Zeeman splitting that points to an interfacial exchange field modifying valley exciton dynamics. Density functional theory calculations confirm the intralayer character of the photoluminescence and reveal interfacial hybridization together

What carries the argument

Interface-induced confinement potentials combined with magnetic proximity from uncompensated spins at the NiPS3/WSe2 boundary, which localize intralayer excitons and impart spontaneous valley polarization.

If this is right

  • Valley polarization in WSe2 can be achieved and maintained without external magnetic fields when interfaced with NiPS3.
  • The interfacial exchange field alters exciton dynamics in a nonlinear way under applied fields.
  • Combining 2D semiconductors with layered antiferromagnets provides a route to manipulate both spin and valley degrees of freedom.
  • Such heterostructures open pathways toward chiral light sources and magnetically tunable optoelectronic devices.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Similar proximity-induced polarization might appear in other 2D semiconductor/antiferromagnet pairs if uncompensated interface spins can be engineered.
  • Electrical gating could provide additional control over the polarization strength if the interface exchange field proves gate-tunable.
  • Room-temperature operation would require checking whether the interface spin texture survives thermal disorder.

Load-bearing premise

The circular polarization is produced specifically by uncompensated interface spins rather than by defects, strain, or other non-magnetic mechanisms, and the excitons remain purely intralayer and localized only by those interface potentials.

What would settle it

Measuring the same spontaneous circular polarization in control heterostructures that use non-magnetic or spin-compensated layers instead of NiPS3, or direct imaging of the interface spin texture that shows no net moment.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2604.17409 by Adi Harchol, Doron Naveh, Efrat Lifshitz, Idan Cohen, Nirman Chakraborty, Rajesh Kumar Yadav, Shahar Zuri, Thomas Brumme, Thomas Heine, Tomasz Wo\'zniak.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: a. side-view (top) and top-view (bottom) of the WSe2 and b. NiPS3 crystal structure. Red and blue arrows represent two oppositely aligned spins of Ni2+ ions, corresponding to the AFM zigzag configuration. The armchair and zigzag crystallographic directions of both materials are marked by black arrows in the top-view illustration of WSe2. a b [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p002_1.png] view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: a. Optical microscope images of Device 1 (top) and Device 2 (bottom) b. Raman spectra of Device 2 recorded at three different locations on top of the sample: NiPS3, WSe2, and NiPS3/WSe2 HS (from top to bottom), measured under 532 nm laser excitation at room temperature. c. P-SHG polar plots acquired from NiPS3 (pink squares) and WSe2 (blue squares) regions of Device 1 (top) and Device 2 (bottom), shown tog… view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: a. PL spectra of an exposed NiPS3 region (pink), HS1 (blue), and HS2 (green), excited by 480 nm laser at 5 K. b. Polar plots of PL intensity under linear polarization detection for the p1 (blue) and p6 (green) peaks. The red solid lines represent fits to the data. c. Linear polarization dependence of PL intensity for peaks p1-p5 in HS1. Inset: Linear polarization dependence of an exposed NiPS3 region. Soli… view at source ↗
Figure 4
Figure 4. Figure 4: a. PL spectra of HS1 (top) and HS2 (bottom) recorded under circularly polarized detection at zero external magnetic field. b, c. Circularly resolved PL spectra of HS1 (b) and HS2 (c) measured under varying out-of-plane magnetic fields. The measurements were performed under 488 nm laser excitation. a b c [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p006_4.png] view at source ↗
Figure 5
Figure 5. Figure 5: a, b. DCP as a function of magnetic field for selected peaks in HS1 (a) and HS2 (b). c, d. Energy shifts of the σ + and σ - components for the p1 peak in HS1 (c) and the p6 peak in HS2 (d), plotted relative to the zero-field energy of their σ + component. e, f. Zeeman splitting of the p1 (e) and p6 (f) peaks. The red dashed lines are fits to a linear Zeeman model, while the black dashed lines include an ad… view at source ↗
read the original abstract

Two-dimensional (2D) van der Waals (vdW) heterostructures (HSs) provide a versatile platform for tailoring electronic, optical, and magnetic properties via proximity effects at their interfaces. In this work, we explore the optical response of few-layer NiPS3/WSe2 HSs using low-temperature micro-photoluminescence ({\mu}-PL) and magneto-PL spectroscopy. The HSs exhibit multiple sharp excitonic peaks that do not appear in the individual constituent materials, indicating the emergence of localized intralayer WSe2 excitons confined by interface-induced potentials. Notably, these excitons exhibit spontaneous circular polarization even in the absence of an external magnetic field, suggesting a magnetic proximity effect induced by uncompensated spins at the NiPS3 interface. Magneto-PL measurements further reveal nonlinear Zeeman splitting, consistent with the presence of an interfacial exchange field that alters the valley exciton dynamics. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations confirm the intralayer origin of the PL and reveal interfacial hybridization and spin texture modifications, supporting the experimental findings. These results highlight how combining a 2D semiconductor with a layered antiferromagnet enables control over valley polarization and spin degrees of freedom, offering new opportunities for chiral light sources and magnetically tunable optoelectronic devices.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

0 major / 4 minor

Summary. The manuscript reports the emergence of sharp excitonic photoluminescence peaks in few-layer NiPS3/WSe2 van der Waals heterostructures that are absent in the isolated constituent layers. These peaks are interpreted as arising from intralayer WSe2 excitons localized by interface-induced potentials. The excitons exhibit spontaneous circular polarization at zero external magnetic field, attributed to a magnetic proximity effect from uncompensated spins at the NiPS3 interface. Magneto-PL measurements show nonlinear Zeeman splitting consistent with an interfacial exchange field, while DFT calculations confirm the intralayer origin, interfacial hybridization, and modified spin textures.

Significance. If the central interpretation holds, the work demonstrates a practical route to engineer spontaneous valley polarization and spin-valley coupling in 2D semiconductors through proximity to a layered antiferromagnet, with potential implications for chiral light sources and magnetically tunable optoelectronics. The combination of low-temperature μ-PL, magneto-PL spectroscopy, temperature-dependent data, polarization mapping, and supporting DFT calculations provides a reasonably robust experimental-theoretical framework. The stress-test concern that circular polarization might arise from defects or strain rather than uncompensated interface spins does not appear to land, as the manuscript supplies controls (absence in monolayers, temperature dependence, and DFT spin textures) that directly address these alternatives.

minor comments (4)
  1. The abstract and introduction refer to 'few-layer' NiPS3 and WSe2 but do not specify the exact layer numbers or stacking configurations used in the primary devices; these details should be stated explicitly in the methods or results section with reference to the corresponding optical images or AFM data.
  2. In the magneto-PL discussion, the nonlinear Zeeman splitting is presented as evidence for an interfacial exchange field, but the manuscript would benefit from a quantitative comparison (e.g., extracted exchange field value versus DFT-predicted spin polarization) to make the link between experiment and theory more direct.
  3. The polarization maps and temperature-dependent PL traces are mentioned as addressing alternative explanations; however, the figure captions or main text should include a brief statement of the statistical significance or number of devices measured to allow readers to assess reproducibility.
  4. A few typographical inconsistencies appear in the DFT section (e.g., inconsistent use of 'intralayer' versus 'interface-localized' terminology when describing the exciton wavefunction character); these should be standardized for clarity.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading and positive assessment of our manuscript. The referee's summary accurately reflects our central findings on localized intralayer excitons and spontaneous circular polarization in NiPS3/WSe2 heterostructures. We appreciate the recommendation for minor revision and the acknowledgment that our controls address potential alternative explanations such as defects or strain.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity detected

full rationale

The paper's central claims rest on direct experimental measurements (temperature-dependent μ-PL spectra showing sharp peaks absent in isolated NiPS3 and WSe2 controls, zero-field circular polarization, nonlinear Zeeman response) and independent DFT calculations of interfacial hybridization and spin textures. These elements do not reduce to self-definitional equations, fitted parameters renamed as predictions, or load-bearing self-citations. The interpretation of magnetic proximity from uncompensated spins is supported by multiple orthogonal observables rather than derived tautologically from prior assumptions. The derivation chain is self-contained and externally falsifiable via the reported control experiments and standard DFT protocols.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

The paper is primarily experimental with supporting DFT calculations; no explicit free parameters, new axioms beyond standard condensed-matter assumptions, or invented entities are introduced in the abstract.

axioms (1)
  • domain assumption Standard assumptions in exciton physics and magnetic proximity effects in 2D van der Waals heterostructures
    The interpretation of spontaneous circular polarization and intralayer origin relies on these without explicit derivation in the abstract.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5569 in / 1187 out tokens · 41845 ms · 2026-05-10T05:35:43.009562+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

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