Perfect Coulomb drag and exciton transport in an excitonic insulator
Article 2025 en
Authors
RQ
Ruishi Qi
AJ
Andrew Y. Joe
ZZ
Zuocheng Zhang
Abstract
1 min read
Strongly coupled electron-hole bilayers can host quantum states of interlayer excitons, such as high-temperature exciton condensates at zero magnetic field. This state is predicted to feature perfect Coulomb drag, where a current in one layer is accompanied by an equal but opposite current in the other. We used an optical technique to probe the electrical transport of correlated electron-hole bilayers based on MoSe<sub>2</sub>/hBN/WSe<sub>2</sub> heterostructures. We observed perfect Coulomb drag in the excitonic insulator phase at low temperatures; the counterflow resistance of interlayer excitons remained finite. These results indicate the formation of an exciton gas that does not condense into a superfluid. Our work demonstrates that dynamic optical spectroscopy provides a powerful tool for probing exciton transport behavior in correlated electron-hole fluids.
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