Unambiguous identification of the indirect band nature of atomically thin hexagonal boron nitride
Atomically thin hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN), especially monolayer, has garnered increasing attention due to its intriguing optical and light-matter-interaction properties. However, its intrinsic optical properties and electronic band structure, have long remained elusive. In this study, near-reso...
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Zusammenfassung: | Atomically thin hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN), especially monolayer, has
garnered increasing attention due to its intriguing optical and
light-matter-interaction properties. However, its intrinsic optical properties
and electronic band structure, have long remained elusive. In this study,
near-resonance excited deep-UV photoluminescence/Raman spectroscopy and deep-UV
reflectance contrast spectroscopy are utilized to experimentally investigate
the optical properties of atomically thin h-BN across various layer numbers. It
is revealed that the absence of luminescence in 1-3 layers h-BN is indicative
of their indirect band gap nature, rectifying previously adopted identification
of a direct band gap in monolayer BN. Notably, band-edge luminescence signals
and indirect bandgap absorption start to appear in 4-layer, and the
luminescence intensity increases with the number of layers, suggesting that
interlayer interactions and periodicity along the z-axis enhance
phonon-assisted indirect bandgap transition, even in the 4-layer case, and
furthermore indicating the formation process of flat bands at the K and M
valleys as the periodicity along the z direction increases. Additionally, the
prominent resonance Raman signals in atomically thin h-BN underscore strong
electron-phonon coupling in this material. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2410.12545 |