Engineering the strain and interlayer excitons of 2D materials via lithographically engraved hexagonal boron nitride

Strain engineering has quickly emerged as a viable option to modify the electronic, optical and magnetic properties of 2D materials. However, it remains challenging to arbitrarily control the strain. Here we show that by creating atomically-flat surface nanostructures in hexagonal boron nitride, we...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2024-01
Hauptverfasser: Yu-Chiang, Hsieh, Zhen-You, Lin, Shin-Ji, Fung, Wen-Shin, Lu, Sheng-Chin, Ho, Siang-Ping Hong, Sheng-Zhu, Ho, Chiu-Hua, Huang, Watanabe, Kenji, Taniguchi, Takashi, Yang-Hao, Chan, Yi-Chun, Chen, Chung-Lin, Wu, Tse-Ming, Chen
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Strain engineering has quickly emerged as a viable option to modify the electronic, optical and magnetic properties of 2D materials. However, it remains challenging to arbitrarily control the strain. Here we show that by creating atomically-flat surface nanostructures in hexagonal boron nitride, we achieve an arbitrary on-chip control of both the strain distribution and magnitude on high-quality molybdenum disulfide. The phonon and exciton emissions are shown to vary in accordance with our strain field designs, enabling us to write and draw any photoluminescence color image in a single chip. Moreover, our strain engineering offers a powerful means to significantly and controllably alter the strengths and energies of interlayer excitons at room temperature. This method can be easily extended to other material systems and offers a promise for functional excitonic devices.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2401.01300