Precisely positioned and scalable single-photon emitters (SPEs) are highly desirable for applications in quantum technology. This Perspective discusses single-photon-emitting atomistic defects in monolayers of MoS2 that can be generated by focused He-ion irradiation with few nanometers positioning accuracy. We present the optical properties of the emitters and the possibilities to implement them into photonic and optoelectronic devices. We showcase the advantages of the presented emitters with respect to atomistic positioning, scalability, long (microsecond) lifetime, and a homogeneous emission energy within ensembles of the emitters. Moreover, we demonstrate that the emitters are stable in energy on a timescale exceeding several weeks and that temperature cycling narrows the ensembles' emission energy distribution.
We demonstrate electrostatic switching
of individual, site-selectively
generated matrices of single photon emitters (SPEs) in MoS2 van der Waals heterodevices. We contact monolayers of MoS2 in field-effect devices with graphene gates and hexagonal boron
nitride as the dielectric and graphite as bottom gates. After the
assembly of such gate-tunable heterodevices, we demonstrate how arrays
of defects, that serve as quantum emitters, can be site-selectively
generated in the monolayer MoS2 by focused helium ion irradiation.
The SPEs are sensitive to the charge carrier concentration in the
MoS2 and switch on and off similar to the neutral exciton
in MoS2 for moderate electron doping. The demonstrated
scheme is a first step for producing scalable, gate-addressable, and
gate-switchable arrays of quantum light emitters in MoS2 heterostacks.
We
demonstrate that prestructured metal nanogaps can be shaped
on-chip to below 10 nm by femtosecond laser ablation. We explore the
plasmonic properties and the nonlinear photocurrent characteristics
of the formed tunnel junctions. The photocurrent can be tuned from
multiphoton absorption toward the laser-induced strong-field tunneling
regime in the nanogaps. We demonstrate that a unipolar ballistic electron
current is achieved by designing the plasmonic junctions to be asymmetric,
which allows ultrafast electronics on the nanometer scale.
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