Hexagonal boron nitride is rapidly gaining interest as a platform for photonic quantum technologies, due to its two-dimensional nature and its ability to host defects deep within its large band gap that may act as room-temperature single-photon emitters. In this review paper we provide an overview of (1) the structure, properties, growth and transfer of hexagonal boron nitride; (2) the creationof colour centres in hexagonal boron nitride and assignment of defects by comparison with calculations for applications in photonic quantum technologies; and (3) heterostructure devices for the electrical tuning and charge control of colour centres that form the basis for photonic quantum technology devices. The aim of this review is to provide readers a summary of progress in both defect engineering and device fabrication in hexagonal boron nitride based photonic quantum technologies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo achieve the modification of photonic band structures and realize the dispersion control toward functional photonic devices, composites of photonic crystal templates with high-refractive-index material are fabricated. A two-step process is used: 3D polymeric woodpile templates are fabricated by a direct laser writing method followed by chemical vapor deposition of MoS. We observed red-shifts of partial bandgaps at the near-infrared region when the thickness of deposited MoS films increases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
September 2022
The fabrication process for the uniform large-scale MoS, WS transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) monolayers, and their heterostructures has been developed by van der Waals epitaxy (VdWE) through the reaction of MoCl or WCl precursors and the reactive gas HS to form MoS or WS monolayers, respectively. The heterostructures of MoS/WS or WS/MoS can be easily achieved by changing the precursor from WCl to MoCl once the WS monolayer has been fabricated or switching the precursor from MoCl to WCl after the MoS monolayer has been deposited on the substrate. These VdWE-grown MoS, WS monolayers, and their heterostructures have been successfully deposited on Si wafers with 300 nm SiO coating (300 nm SiO/Si), quartz glass, fused silica, and sapphire substrates using the protocol that we have developed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
September 2022
The switchable optical and electrical properties of phase change materials (PCMs) are finding new applications beyond data storage in reconfigurable photonic devices. However, high power heat pulses are needed to melt-quench the material from crystalline to amorphous. This is especially true in silicon photonics, where the high thermal conductivity of the waveguide material makes heating the PCM energy inefficient.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFemtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy has been employed to unravel separate initial nonequilibrium dynamic processes of photo-injected electrons and holes during the formation process of the lowest excitons at the K-valley in few-layer tungsten disulfide. Charge carrier thermalization and cooling, as well as concomitant many-body effects on the exciton resonances, are distinguished. The thermalization of holes is observed to be faster than that of electrons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLaser processing is a highly versatile technique for the post-synthesis treatment and modification of transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs). However, to date, TMDCs synthesis typically relies on large area CVD growth and lithographic post-processing for nanodevice fabrication, thus relying heavily on complex, capital intensive, vacuum-based processing environments and fabrication tools. This inflexibility necessarily restricts the development of facile, fast, very low-cost synthesis protocols.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
February 2021
In order to investigate the thermal and chemical (in)stabilities of MAPbI incorporated with graphene and silver nanowire (AgNW) electrodes, we employed the terahertz (THz) time-domain spectroscopy, which has a unique ability to deliver the information of electrical properties and the intermolecular bonding and crystalline nature of materials. In in situ THz spectroscopy of MAPbI, we observed a slight blue-shift in frequency of the 2 THz phonon mode as temperatures increase across the tetragonal-cubic structural phase transition. For MAPbI with the graphene top electrode, no noticeable frequency shift is observed until the temperature reaches the maximum operating temperature of solar cells (85 °C).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis work proposes a new route to overcome the limits of the thermal poling technique for the creation of second order nonlinearity in conventional silica optical fibers. We prove that it is possible to enhance the nonlinear behavior of periodically poled fibers merging the effects of poling with the nonlinear intrinsic properties of some materials, such as MoS, which are deposited inside the cladding holes of a twin-hole silica fiber. The optical waves involved in a second harmonic generation process partially overlap inside the thin film of the nonlinear material and exploit its higher third order susceptibility to produce an enhanced SHG.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Millions of smartphones contain a photoplethysmography (PPG) biosensor (Maxim Integrated) that accurately measures pulse oximetry. No clinical use of these embedded sensors is currently being made, despite the relevance of remote clinical pulse oximetry to the management of chronic cardiopulmonary disease, and the triage, initial management, and remote monitoring of people affected by respiratory viral pandemics, such as severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 or influenza. To be used for clinical pulse oximetry the embedded PPG system must be paired with an application (app) and meet US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and International Organization for Standardization (ISO) requirements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFemtosecond pump-probe experiments with a ∼6.4 fs time-resolution were performed to investigate the coherent phonon dynamics in a c-plane sapphire crystal before and after intense 800 nm femtosecond laser irradiation. The intense femtosecond laser induced defect/distortion and even re-crystallization of crystalline structures, which result in the appearance of new peaks and relative intensity change in coherent phonon and Raman spectra.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe hollow regions of an anti-resonant fiber (ARF) offer an excellent template for the deposition of functional materials. When the optical properties of such materials can be modified via external stimuli, it offers a method to control the transmission properties of the fiber device. In this Letter, we show that the integration of a ${{\rm MoS}_2}$MoS film into the ARF voids allows the fiber to act as an electro-optical modulator.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlike MoS ultra-thin films, where solution-based single source precursor synthesis for electronic applications has been widely studied, growing uniform and large area few-layer WS films using this approach has been more challenging. Here, we report a method for growth of few-layer WS that results in continuous and uniform films over centimetre scale. The method is based on the thermolysis of spin coated ammonium tetrathiotungstate ((NH)WS) films by two-step high temperature annealing without additional sulphurization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe change of optical properties that some usually natural compounds or polymeric materials show upon the application of external stress is named mechanochromism. Herein, an artificial nanomechanical metasurface formed by a subwavelength nanowire array made of molybdenum disulfide, molybdenum oxide, and silicon nitride changes color upon mechanical deformation. The aforementioned deformation induces reversible changes in the optical transmission (relative transmission change of 197% at 654 nm), thus demonstrating a giant mechanochromic effect.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTriboelectric properties of chemical vapor deposited WS nanoflakes have been characterized in nano-range by atomic force microscopy (AFM) and Kelvin force microscopy (KFM). The triboelectric process is dependent on the thickness of WS nanoflakes, and it is sensitive to the adsorbates like water molecules, as well as transferred Pt from the tip on the sample. The density of tribo-charge can be modified by applying various biases to the conductive Pt-coated tip during the frictional process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTunneling triboelectrification of chemical vapor deposited monolayer MoS has been characterized at nanoscale with contact-mode atomic force microscopy (AFM) and Kelvin force microscopy (KFM). Although charges can be trapped on insulators like SiO by conventional triboelectrification, triboelectric charges tunneling through MoS and localized at the underlying substrate exhibit more than two orders of magnitude longer lifetime. Their polarity and density can be modified by triboelectric process with various bias voltages applied to Pt-coated AFM tips, and the saturated density is almost 30 times higher than the reported result of SiO.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present temperature-dependent resonance Raman measurements on monolayer WS for the temperature range 4-295 K using excitation photon energies from 1.9 to 2.15 eV in ∼7 meV steps.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFemtosecond optical pump-probe spectroscopy with 10 fs visible pulses is employed to elucidate the ultrafast carrier dynamics of few-layer MoS2. A nonthermal carrier distribution is observed immediately following the photoexcitation of the A and B excitonic transitions by the ultrashort, broadband laser pulse. Carrier thermalization occurs within 20 fs and proceeds via both carrier-carrier and carrier-phonon scattering, as evidenced by the observed dependence of the thermalization time on the carrier density and the sample temperature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNano-scale MoS2 thin films are successfully deposited on a variety of substrates by atmospheric pressure chemical vapor deposition (APCVD) at ambient temperature, followed by a two-step annealing process. These annealed MoS2 thin films are characterized with scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX), micro-Raman, X-ray diffraction (XRD), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), UV-VIS-NIR spectrometry, photoluminescence (PL) and Hall Effect measurement. Key optical and electronic properties of APCVD grown MoS2 thin films are determined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough new spintronic devices based on the giant spin-orbit splitting of single-layer MoS(2) have been proposed, such splitting has not been studied effectively in experiments. This Letter reports the valence band spin-orbit splitting in single-layer MoS(2) for the first time, probed by the triply resonant Raman scattering process. We found that upon 325 nm laser irradiation, the second order overtone and combination Raman modes of single-layer MoS(2) are dramatically enhanced.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on the first fabrication of a glass fiber based laser-induced crystalline waveguide. The glass and crystal are based on the stoichiometric composition of (La,Yb)BGeO(5). A laser induced waveguide has been fabricated on the surface of a ribbon glass fiber using milliwatt-level continuous wave UV laser radiation at a fast scanning speed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF