Quantum Emitters at Telecommunication Wavelengths based on Carbon Defects in Transition Metal Dichalcogenides
Chanaprom Cholsuk, Sujin Suwanna, Tobias Vogl

TL;DR
This paper proposes using carbon-doped transition metal dichalcogenide bilayers to create stable, room-temperature quantum emitters operating at telecommunication wavelengths, overcoming previous photoluminescence limitations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel strategy combining indirect bandgap TMD bilayers with carbon defect doping to enable telecommunication-wavelength quantum emission at room temperature.
Findings
Neutral defects emit in telecommunication windows
Negatively charged defects show near-infrared emission
Defect properties depend on host material and site
Abstract
Low-dimensional materials have emerged as promising hosts for quantum emitters, whose emission typically arises from either strain-induced band bending or defect-induced two-level systems. Among these materials, transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) monolayers have attracted particular attention; however, their performance is limited by strong photoluminescence (PL) quenching at room temperature. As TMDs transition from a direct to an indirect bandgap when moving from monolayers to multilayers, we herein propose a strategy to overcome this quenching limitation by exploiting the indirect bandgap of TMD bilayers in combination with a point defect doping. The indirect gap suppresses excitonic PL, while specific defects enable robust defect-mediated quantum emission. Using hybrid-functional density functional theory, we investigate substitutional carbon defects at chalcogen sites (S and Se)…
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