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Optical Polarization of Quantum Emitters in Hexagonal Boron Nitride

Invited

Abstract

Isolated point defects in wide bandgap semiconductors are single photon sources with applications in quantum optics, precision sensing, and quantum information processing technologies. In this talk, I will discuss our progress on identifying and characterizing isolated defects in the Van der Waals material hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN). First, I will briefly introduce confocal fluorescence measurements of isolated defects in h-BN that exhibit single photon emission when excited by sub-bandgap energy light. The temperature dependence of the zero-phonon, single-photon emission from these defects is well-described by a lattice vibration model that considers coupling to low energy, in-plane acoustic phonons. Next, I will discuss the temperature-independent polarization selection rules of these zero-phonon lines (ZPLs) and compare our findings with the predictions of a Huang-Rhys model involving two electronic states. Our survey, which spans the spectral range ~550-740 nm, reveals that, in disagreement with a two-electronic-level model, the absorption and emission dipoles are often misaligned. We relate the dipole misalignment angle (Δθ) of a ZPL to its energy shift from the excitation energy (ΔE) and find that Δθ≈0° when ΔE is less than the maximum single-phonon energy in h-BN and that 0≦Δθ≦90° when ΔE exceeds the maximum single-phonon energy in h-BN. This observation indicates that a two-level Huang-Rhys model succeeds at describing excitations mediated by one phonon but fails at describing excitations requiring multiple phonons. We propose that excitations requiring multiple phonons are inefficient in h-BN and that ZPLs with large ΔE are excited indirectly via an intermediate electronic state. This hypothesis is corroborated by polarization measurements of an individual ZPL excited with two distinct wavelengths that indicate a single ZPL may be excited by multiple mechanisms.

Presenters

  • Nicholas Jungwirth

    Cornell University

Authors

  • Nicholas Jungwirth

    Cornell University

  • Brian Calderon

    Cornell University

  • Yanxin Ji

    Cornell University

  • Michael Spencer

    Cornell University

  • Michael Flatté

    Department of Physics and Astronomy, The University of Iowa, University of Iowa, Department of Physics, University of Iowa, Physics and Astronomy, Univ of Iowa, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Iowa, Department of Applied Physics, Eindhoven University of Technology, Department of Physics, University of Iowa; Department of Applied Physics, Eindhoven University of Technology, Univ. of Iowa/Eindoven University of Technology, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Iowa, Univ of Iowa

  • Gregory Fuchs

    Cornell University, AEP, Cornell University, School of Applied and Engineering Physics, Cornell University