Exciton Brightening in Monolayer Phosphorene via Dimensionality Modification
Renjing Xu, Jiong Yang, Ye Win Myint, Jiajie Pei, Han Yan, Fan Wang,, and Yuerui Lu

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates exciton brightening in monolayer phosphorene by converting quasi-1D excitons into 0D-like localized states through substrate modification, significantly enhancing luminescence efficiency and enabling high-temperature operation.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method to achieve exciton brightening in monolayer phosphorene via dimensionality modification from quasi-1D to 0D, improving luminescence quantum yield.
Findings
Luminescence quantum yield increased by at least 33.6 times.
Localized excitons emit at ~920 nm at elevated temperatures.
Enhanced radiative recombination and reduced non-radiative decay observed.
Abstract
Two-dimensional (2D) monolayer phosphorene, a 2D system with quasi-one-dimensional (quasi-1D) excitons, provides a unique 2D platform for investigating the dynamics of excitons in reduced dimensions and fundamental many-body interactions. However, on the other hand, the quasi-1D excitonic nature can limit the luminescence quantum yield significantly. Here, we report exciton brightening in monolayer phosphorene achieved via the dimensionality modification of excitons from quasi-1D to zero-dimensional (0D), through the transference of monolayer phosphorene samples onto defect-rich oxide substrate deposited by plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD). The resultant interfacial luminescent local states lead to exciton localization and trigger efficient photon emissions at a new wavelength of ~920 nm. The luminescence quantum yield of 0D-like localized excitons is measured to be at…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
Topics2D Materials and Applications · Perovskite Materials and Applications · MXene and MAX Phase Materials
