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Photoluminescence Induced by Substitutional Nitrogen in Single-Layer Tungsten Disulfide.

Qingkai QianWenjing WuLintao PengYuanxi WangAnne Marie Z TanLiangbo LiangSaban M HusKe WangTanushree H ChoudhuryJoan Marie RedwingAlexander A PuretzkyDavid B GeoheganRichard G HennigXuedan MaShengxi Huang
Published in: ACS nano (2022)
The electronic and optical properties of two-dimensional materials can be strongly influenced by defects, some of which can find significant implementations, such as controllable doping, prolonged valley lifetime, and single-photon emissions. In this work, we demonstrate that defects created by remote N 2 plasma exposure in single-layer WS 2 can induce a distinct low-energy photoluminescence (PL) peak at 1.59 eV, which is in sharp contrast to that caused by remote Ar plasma. This PL peak has a critical requirement on the N 2 plasma exposure dose, which is strongest for WS 2 with about 2.0% sulfur deficiencies (including substitutions and vacancies) and vanishes at 5.6% or higher sulfur deficiencies. Both experiments and first-principles calculations suggest that this 1.59 eV PL peak is caused by defects related to the sulfur substitutions by nitrogen, even though low-temperature PL measurements also reveal that not all the sulfur vacancies are remedied by the substitutional nitrogen. The distinct low-energy PL peak suggests that the substitutional nitrogen defect in single-layer WS 2 can potentially serve as an isolated artificial atom for creating single-photon emitters, and its intensity can also be used to monitor the doping concentrations of substitutional nitrogen.
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