High-Density, Localized Quantum Emitters in Strained 2D Semiconductors.

Journal: ACS Nano
Published:
Abstract

Two-dimensional chalcogenide semiconductors have recently emerged as a host material for quantum emitters of single photons. While several reports on defect- and strain-induced single-photon emission from 2D chalcogenides exist, a bottom-up, lithography-free approach to producing a high density of emitters remains elusive. Further, the physical properties of quantum emission in the case of strained 2D semiconductors are far from being understood. Here, we demonstrate a bottom-up, scalable, and lithography-free approach for creating large areas of localized emitters with high density (∼150 emitters/um2) in a WSe2 monolayer. We induce strain inside the WSe2 monolayer with high spatial density by conformally placing the WSe2 monolayer over a uniform array of Pt nanoparticles with a size of 10 nm. Cryogenic, time-resolved, and gate-tunable luminescence measurements combined with near-field luminescence spectroscopy suggest the formation of localized states in strained regions that emit single photons with a high spatial density. Our approach of using a metal nanoparticle array to generate a high density of strained quantum emitters will be applied to scalable, tunable, and versatile quantum light sources.

Authors
Gwangwoo Kim, Hyong Kim, Pawan Kumar, Mahfujur Rahaman, Christopher Stevens, Jonghyuk Jeon, Kiyoung Jo, Kwan-ho Kim, Nicholas Trainor, Haoyue Zhu, Byeong-hyeok Sohn, Eric Stach, Joshua Hendrickson, Nicholas Glavin, Joonki Suh, Joan Redwing, Deep Jariwala