Electronic and Structural Symmetry of Quantum Emitters in Hexagonal Boron Nitride
ORAL
Abstract
Analogous to three-dimensional wide-bandgap semiconductors like diamond and silicon carbide, hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) hosts isolated defects exhibiting single-photon emission at room temperature. The ability to create quantum emitters within a two-dimensional material promises breakthrough advances in quantum sensing, photonics, and use in multi-functional heterostructures. Critical to such applications, however, is an understanding of the physics underlying h-BN's quantum emission. Here, we characterize the angular dependence of h-BN defect fluorescence as a function of excitation polarization. Using single-crystal exfoliated h-BN films treated to create quantum emitters, we study correlations between the defect dipole orientation and the h-BN crystallographic axes with fluorescence spectroscopy and electron backscatter diffraction. Initial studies indicate a weak correlation of the absorptive dipole with the h-BN lattice, although some dipoles are notably uncorrelated with the lattice (Exarhos \textit{et al.}, arXiv:1609.02641 (2016)). Additionally, grain boundaries and local lattice strain may play a role in the absorptive dipole orientation.
*Work supported by the Army Research Office (W911NF-15-1-0589), NSF MRSEC (DMR-1120901), and the Research Council of Lithuania (No. M-ERA.NET-1/2015).
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