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We report the first observation of substitutional silicon atoms in single-layer hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) using aberration corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM). The medium angle annular dark field (MAADF) images reveal silicon atoms exclusively filling boron vacancies. This structure is stable enough under electron beam for repeated imaging. Density functional theory (DFT) is used to study the energetics, structure and properties of the experimentally observed structure. The formation energies of all possible charge states of the different silicon substitutions (Si$_mathrm{B}$, Si$_mathrm{N}$ and Si$_mathrm{{BN}}$) are calculated. The results reveal Si$_mathrm{B}^{+1}$ as the most stable substitutional configuration. In this case, silicon atom elevates by 0.66{AA} out of the lattice with unoccupied defect levels in the electronic band gap above the Fermi level. The formation energy shows a slightly exothermic process. Our results unequivocally show that heteroatoms can be incorporated into the h-BN lattice opening way for applications ranging from single-atom catalysis to atomically precise magnetic structures.
We present a general picture of the exciton properties of layered materials in terms of the excitations of their single-layer building blocks. To this end, we derive a model excitonic hamiltonian by drawing an analogy with molecular crystals, which a
The relative orientation of successive sheets, i.e. the stacking sequence, in layered two-dimensional materials is central to the electronic, thermal, and mechanical properties of the material. Often different stacking sequences have comparable cohes
The calculated quasiparticle band structure of bulk hexagonal boron nitride using the all-electron GW approximation shows that this compound is an indirect-band-gap semiconductor. The solution of the Bethe-Salpeter equation for the electron-hole two-
High pressure Raman experiments on Boron Nitride multi-walled nanotubes show that the intensity of the vibrational mode at ~ 1367 cm-1 vanishes at ~ 12 GPa and it does not recover under decompression. In comparison, the high pressure Raman experiment
Atomically thin van der Waals crystals have recently enabled new scientific and technological breakthroughs across a variety of disciplines in materials science, nanophotonics and physics. However, non-classical photon emission from these materials h