Issue 17, 2018

Single photon emission from plasma treated 2D hexagonal boron nitride

Abstract

Artificial atomic systems in solids are becoming increasingly important building blocks in quantum information processing and scalable quantum nanophotonic networks. Amongst numerous candidates, 2D hexagonal boron nitride has recently emerged as a promising platform hosting single photon emitters. Here, we report a number of robust plasma and thermal annealing methods for fabrication of emitters in tape-exfoliated hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) crystals. A two-step process comprising Ar plasma etching and subsequent annealing in Ar is highly robust, and yields an eight-fold increase in the concentration of emitters in hBN. The initial plasma-etching step generates emitters that suffer from blinking and bleaching, whereas the two-step process yields emitters that are photostable at room temperature with emission wavelengths greater than ∼700 nm. Density functional theory modeling suggests that the emitters might be associated with defect complexes that contain oxygen. This is further confirmed by generating the emitters via annealing hBN in air. Our findings advance the present understanding of the structure of quantum emitters in hBN and enhance the nanofabrication toolkit needed to realize integrated quantum nanophotonic circuits.

Graphical abstract: Single photon emission from plasma treated 2D hexagonal boron nitride

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
05 Nov 2017
Accepted
29 Mar 2018
First published
02 Apr 2018

Nanoscale, 2018,10, 7957-7965

Author version available

Single photon emission from plasma treated 2D hexagonal boron nitride

Z. Xu, C. Elbadawi, T. T. Tran, M. Kianinia, X. Li, D. Liu, T. B. Hoffman, M. Nguyen, S. Kim, J. H. Edgar, X. Wu, L. Song, S. Ali, M. Ford, M. Toth and I. Aharonovich, Nanoscale, 2018, 10, 7957 DOI: 10.1039/C7NR08222C

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