| Literature DB >> 27700104 |
Nathan Chejanovsky1,2, Mohammad Rezai1, Federico Paolucci2, Youngwook Kim2, Torsten Rendler1, Wafa Rouabeh2, Felipe Fávaro de Oliveira1, Patrick Herlinger2, Andrej Denisenko1, Sen Yang1, Ilja Gerhardt1,2, Amit Finkler1, Jurgen H Smet2, Jörg Wrachtrup1,2.
Abstract
Newly discovered van der Waals materials like MoS2, WSe2, hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN), and recently C2N have sparked intensive research to unveil the quantum behavior associated with their 2D structure. Of great interest are 2D materials that host single quantum emitters. h-BN, with a band gap of 5.95 eV, has been shown to host single quantum emitters which are stable at room temperature in the UV and visible spectral range. In this paper we investigate correlations between h-BN structural features and emitter location from bulk down to the monolayer at room temperature. We demonstrate that chemical etching and ion irradiation can generate emitters in h-BN. We analyze the emitters' spectral features and show that they are dominated by the interaction of their electronic transition with a single Raman active mode of h-BN. Photodynamics analysis reveals diverse rates between the electronic states of the emitter. The emitters show excellent photo stability even under ambient conditions and in monolayers. Comparing the excitation polarization between different emitters unveils a connection between defect orientation and the h-BN hexagonal structure. The sharp spectral features, color diversity, room-temperature stability, long-lived metastable states, ease of fabrication, proximity of the emitters to the environment, outstanding chemical stability, and biocompatibility of h-BN provide a completely new class of systems that can be used for sensing and quantum photonics applications.Entities:
Keywords: Single quantum emitters; hexagonal boron-nitride; van der Waals materials
Year: 2016 PMID: 27700104 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b03268
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189