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Carbon dimer defect as a source of the 4.1 eV luminescence in hexagonal boron nitride

Published 4 Jul 2019 in cond-mat.mtrl-sci | (1907.02303v2)

Abstract: We propose that the carbon dimer defect in hexagonal boron nitride gives rise to the ubiquitous narrow luminescence band with a zero-phonon line of 4.08 eV (usually labeled the 4.1 eV band). Our first-principles calculations are based on hybrid density functionals that provide a reliable description of wide band-gap materials. The calculated zero-phonon line energy of 4.3 eV is close to the experimental value, and the deduced Huang-Rhys factor of ${S \approx 2.0}$, indicating modest electron-phonon coupling, falls within the experimental range. The optical transition occurs between two localized $\pi$-type defects states, with a very short radiative lifetime of 1.2 nanoseconds, in very good accord with experiments.

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