Quantum emitters in semiconductor transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) monolayers hold great promise for many quantum optics applications due to the intriguing properties afforded by the host materials. The creation of localized excitonic states in two-dimensional semiconductors is also fundamentally interesting. Local strain engineering of TMD monolayers has been attested to be a viable approach for creating quantum emitters. However, despite the ubiquitous existence of local topography variations in the structures used to create strain gradients in the TMD monolayers, an understanding of their influence on the strain fields and exciton trapping is notably lacking, especially on the nanoscale. In this study, we investigate WSe2 monolayers deposited on the edges of asfabricated trenches, which are deemed to induce 1D delocalized strain profiles in the monolayers, and observe optical signatures of weakly confined excitonic states supporting biexciton emission. Here, our numerical simulations of the strain distributions suggest that the quantum emitters originate from quasi-1D like localized strain profiles induced by local topography variations at the trench edges. These findings have strong implications toward the controlled creation of quantum emitters in TMD monolayers and their efficient coupling to photonic structures.
@article{osti_2348892,
author = {Li, Xinxin and Wang, Wei and Ma, Xuedan},
title = {Quantum Photon Sources in WSe<sub>2</sub> Monolayers Induced by Weakly Localized Strain Fields},
annote = {Quantum emitters in semiconductor transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) monolayers hold great promise for many quantum optics applications due to the intriguing properties afforded by the host materials. The creation of localized excitonic states in two-dimensional semiconductors is also fundamentally interesting. Local strain engineering of TMD monolayers has been attested to be a viable approach for creating quantum emitters. However, despite the ubiquitous existence of local topography variations in the structures used to create strain gradients in the TMD monolayers, an understanding of their influence on the strain fields and exciton trapping is notably lacking, especially on the nanoscale. In this study, we investigate WSe2 monolayers deposited on the edges of asfabricated trenches, which are deemed to induce 1D delocalized strain profiles in the monolayers, and observe optical signatures of weakly confined excitonic states supporting biexciton emission. Here, our numerical simulations of the strain distributions suggest that the quantum emitters originate from quasi-1D like localized strain profiles induced by local topography variations at the trench edges. These findings have strong implications toward the controlled creation of quantum emitters in TMD monolayers and their efficient coupling to photonic structures.},
doi = {10.1021/acs.jpcc.2c06148},
url = {https://www.osti.gov/biblio/2348892},
journal = {Journal of Physical Chemistry. C},
issn = {ISSN 1932-7447},
number = {47},
volume = {126},
place = {United States},
publisher = {American Chemical Society},
year = {2022},
month = {11}}