“…Chemical doping is often exploited to tune material properties. − For example, in semiconductors, aliovalent substitution leads to p- and n-type doping, the key elements of devices such as diodes and transistors that enable applications in modern electronics such as information processing, sensing, energy harvesting, and medical devices. − Though a critical component, such substitutions can also introduce chemical and electronic inhomogeneities at the nanoscale, which can significantly impact the carrier mobility and performance of semiconducting devices. These inhomogeneities can be particularly detrimental with shrinking device dimensions, including the recent emergence of two-dimensional semiconducting monolayered materials. − On the other hand, for quantum materials, these heterogeneities are usually correlated and give rise to quantum phenomena such as entanglement and topological effects, magnetism, and superconductivity. − , For instance, vacancy defects in wide bandgap semiconductors, such as diamond and silicon carbide, can result in tightly bound and robust spin states even at room temperature. Such quantum states are promising candidates for qubits that can be entangled with their neighbors and addressed by both optical and microwave techniques .…”