MRS Meetings and Events

 

EL04.03.04 2024 MRS Spring Meeting

Defect conversion in h-BN using electron beam irradiation for blue emission

When and Where

Apr 23, 2024
2:15pm - 2:30pm

Room 345, Level 3, Summit

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Yue Xu1,Edward Naland1,Zackaria Mahfoud2,Chengyuan Yang1,Andrew Bettiol1,Michel Bosman1,2,Silvija Gradecak1

National University of Singapore1,Agency for Science, Technology and Research(A*STAR)2

Abstract

Yue Xu1,Edward Naland1,Zackaria Mahfoud2,Chengyuan Yang1,Andrew Bettiol1,Michel Bosman1,2,Silvija Gradecak1

National University of Singapore1,Agency for Science, Technology and Research(A*STAR)2
Hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) is a layered van der Waals material with a bandgap of 6 eV. Thanks to its ultra-wide bandgap, h-BN can host a series of solid-state color centers, covering a range of wavelengths from UV to the visible region. h-BN emitters have attracted particular attention, not only for their high stability and strong luminescence at room temperature, but also due to their anti-bunching behavior, a characteristic of quantum emitters. In this work, we report the controlled generation of 437 nm quantum emitters (referred to as “blue emitters”) in h-BN <i>via</i> electron beam irradiation. We demonstrate that irradiation of h-BN using 3–10 keV electron beams in a scanning electron microscope (SEM) produces the blue emitters in a spatially precise manner, as measured using photoluminescence (PL). We establish the correlation between the incident electron dose and PL intensity, indicating that the negative charge trapped in h-BN facilitates the 437 nm emission.<br/>To explore the structural origin of the h-BN blue emitters, we introduce point defects to h-BN using a helium ion microscope (HIM) before electron beam irradiation and show that the blue emitter PL intensity increased in the defect-engineered area. Furthermore, using a scanning transmission electron microscope (STEM) coupled with cathodoluminescence (CL), we observe the real-time activation and saturation of the blue emitter in pristine h-BN. The resulting emission is stable for &gt;1000 s, making it a promising candidate for photonic device integration. We achieved controlled production of electron beam-induced blue emitters in h-BN by tuning the electron dose and native defect density, which advances our understanding of their structural origin as the conversion of native defects in the h-BN lattice. These h-BN blue emitters with enhanced spectral stability can serve as a building block for future photonic devices.

Keywords

defects | van der Waals

Symposium Organizers

Hideki Hirayama, RIKEN
Robert Kaplar, Sandia National Laboratories
Sriram Krishnamoorthy, University of California, Santa Barbara
Matteo Meneghini, University of Padova

Symposium Support

Silver
Taiyo Nippon Sanso

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature