Freeform nanostructuring of hexagonal boron nitride
Nolan Lassaline, Deepankur Thureja, Thibault Chervy, Daniel Petter,, Puneet A. Murthy, Armin W. Knoll, and David J. Norris

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel method for freeform nanostructuring of hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) using thermal scanning-probe lithography and reactive-ion etching, enabling advanced optoelectronic and nanoelectronic device architectures.
Contribution
It demonstrates a precise, high-resolution technique for shaping hBN flakes into complex structures, expanding their application potential in photonics, quantum optics, and 2D electronics.
Findings
Successful fabrication of hBN microelements and microlenses.
Integration of hBN microstructures into optical microcavities.
Creation of high-resolution electronic landscapes for strain and band-structure engineering.
Abstract
Hexagonal boron nitride (hBN)-long-known as a thermally stable ceramic-is now available as atomically smooth, single-crystalline flakes, revolutionizing its use in optoelectronics. For nanophotonics, these flakes offer strong nonlinearities, hyperbolic dispersion, and single-photon emission, providing unique properties for optical and quantum-optical applications. For nanoelectronics, their pristine surfaces, chemical stability, and wide bandgap have made them the key substrate, encapsulant, and gate dielectric for two-dimensional electronic devices. However, while exploring these advantages, researchers have been restricted to flat flakes or those patterned with basic slits and holes, severely limiting advanced architectures. If freely varying flake profiles were possible, the hBN structure would present a powerful design parameter to further manipulate the flow of photons, electrons,…
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Taxonomy
Topics2D Materials and Applications · Graphene research and applications · Plasmonic and Surface Plasmon Research
