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This thesis presents optical methods to split the energy levels of
electronic valleys in transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) by
means of coherent light-matter interactions. The electronic valleys
found in monolayer TMDs such as MoS2, WS2, and WSe2 are among the
many novel properties exhibited by semiconductors when thinned down
to a few atomic layers, and have have been proposed as a new way to
carry information in next generation devices (so-called
valleytronics). These valleys are, however, normally locked in the
same energy level, which limits their potential use for
applications. The author describes experiments performed with a
pump-probe technique using transient absorption spectroscopy on
MoS2 and WS2. It is demonstrated that hybridizing the electronic
valleys with light allows one to optically tune their energy levels
in a controllable valley-selective manner. In particular, by using
off-resonance circularly polarized light at small detuning, one can
tune the energy level of one valley through the optical Stark
effect. Also presented within are observations, at larger detuning,
of a separate contribution from the so-called Bloch--Siegert
effect, a delicate phenomenon that has eluded direct observation in
solids. The two effects obey opposite selection rules, enabling one
to separate the two effects at two different valleys.
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