论文标题
室温在磷酸纳米容器中的光学和磁性边缘
Room Temperature Optically and Magnetically Active Edges in Phosphorene Nanoribbons
论文作者
论文摘要
纳米式 - 二维材料的纳米宽条是冷凝物理物理学中的独特系统。他们将低维材料的奇异电子结构与增强的裸露边缘结合在一起,其中包括超级自旋相干时间,量子限制和拓扑保护状态在内的现象可以出现。这种新材料概念的一个令人兴奋的前景是沿纳米替边缘的可调半导体电子结构和磁性的潜力。磁性和半导体特性的这种组合是解锁基于自旋的电子设备(例如非挥发性晶体管)的第一步,这是通往低能计算的途径,因此通常仅在掺杂的半导体系统和/或在低温下观察到。在这里,我们报告了磷纳米宾(PNRS)的磁性和半导体特性。静态(Squid)和动态(EPR)磁化探针表明,在室温下,PNR的膜具有宏观磁性,其边缘产生,内部田地约为250至800 mt。在溶液中,巨型磁各向异性可以在适度的子1T场上对齐PNR。通过利用这种对齐效果,我们发现在光激发时,能量会迅速插入到磁性边缘并耦合到对称forbidder的边缘声子模式的深色外激体状态。我们的结果建立了PNR作为一种独特的候选系统,用于在室温下研究磁力和半导体基态的相互作用,并为在量子电子中使用低维纳米材料提供了垫脚石。
Nanoribbons - nanometer wide strips of a two-dimensional material - are a unique system in condensed matter physics. They combine the exotic electronic structures of low-dimensional materials with an enhanced number of exposed edges, where phenomena including ultralong spin coherence times, quantum confinement and topologically protected states can emerge. An exciting prospect for this new material concept is the potential for both a tunable semiconducting electronic structure and magnetism along the nanoribbon edge. This combination of magnetism and semiconducting properties is the first step in unlocking spin-based electronics such as non-volatile transistors, a route to low-energy computing, and has thus far typically only been observed in doped semiconductor systems and/or at low temperatures. Here, we report the magnetic and semiconducting properties of phosphorene nanoribbons (PNRs). Static (SQUID) and dynamic (EPR) magnetization probes demonstrate that at room temperature, films of PNRs exhibit macroscopic magnetic properties, arising from their edge, with internal fields of ~ 250 to 800 mT. In solution, a giant magnetic anisotropy enables the alignment of PNRs at modest sub-1T fields. By leveraging this alignment effect, we discover that upon photoexcitation, energy is rapidly funneled to a dark-exciton state that is localized to the magnetic edge and coupled to a symmetry-forbidden edge phonon mode. Our results establish PNRs as a unique candidate system for studying the interplay of magnetism and semiconducting ground states at room temperature and provide a stepping-stone towards using low-dimensional nanomaterials in quantum electronics.