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Dive into the research topics where Xuedan Ma is active.

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Featured researches published by Xuedan Ma.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2015

Room-temperature single-photon generation from solitary dopants of carbon nanotubes

Xuedan Ma; Nicolai Hartmann; Jon K. Baldwin; Stephen K. Doorn; Han Htoon

On-demand single-photon sources capable of operating at room temperature and the telecom wavelength range of 1,300-1,500 nm hold the key to the realization of novel technologies that span from sub-diffraction imaging to quantum key distribution and photonic quantum information processing. Here, we show that incorporation of undoped (6,5) single-walled carbon nanotubes into a SiO2 matrix can lead to the creation of solitary oxygen dopant states capable of fluctuation-free, room-temperature single-photon emission in the 1,100-1,300 nm wavelength range. We investigated the effects of temperature on photoluminescence emission efficiencies, fluctuations and decay dynamics of the dopant states and determined the conditions most suitable for the observation of single-photon emission. This emission can in principle be extended to 1,500 nm by doping of smaller-bandgap single-walled carbon nanotubes. This easy tunability presents a distinct advantage over existing defect centre single-photon emitters (for example, diamond defect centres). Our SiO2-encapsulated sample also presents exciting opportunities to apply Si/SiO2-based micro/nano-device fabrication techniques in the development of electrically driven single-photon sources and integration of these sources into quantum photonic devices and networks.


ACS Nano | 2014

Electronic Structure and Chemical Nature of Oxygen Dopant States in Carbon Nanotubes

Xuedan Ma; Lyudmyla Adamska; Hisato Yamaguchi; Sibel Ebru Yalcin; Sergei Tretiak; Stephen K. Doorn; Han Htoon

We performed low temperature photoluminescence (PL) studies on individual oxygen-doped single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) and correlated our observations to electronic structure simulations. Our experiment reveals multiple sharp asymmetric emission peaks at energies 50-300 meV red-shifted from that of the E11 bright exciton peak. Our simulation suggests an association of these peaks with deep trap states tied to different specific chemical adducts. In addition, oxygen doping is also observed to split the E11 exciton into two or more states with an energy splitting <40 meV. We attribute these states to dark states that are brightened through defect-induced symmetry breaking. While the wave functions of these brightened states are delocalized, those of the deep-trap states are strongly localized and pinned to the dopants. These findings are consistent with our experimental observation of asymmetric broadening of the deep trap emission peaks, which can result from interaction between pinned excitons and one-dimensional phonons. Exciton pinning also increases the sensitivity of the deep traps to the local dielectric environment, leading to a large inhomogeneous broadening. Observations of multiple spectral features on single nanotubes indicate the possibility of different chemical adducts coexisting on a given nanotube.


ACS Nano | 2016

Photoluminescence Dynamics of Aryl sp3 Defect States in Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes

Nicolai Hartmann; Kirill A. Velizhanin; Erik Haroz; Mijin Kim; Xuedan Ma; YuHuang Wang; Han Htoon; Stephen K. Doorn

Photoluminescent defect states introduced by sp(3) functionalization of semiconducting carbon nanotubes are rapidly emerging as important routes for boosting emission quantum yields and introducing new functionality. Knowledge of the relaxation dynamics of these states is required for understanding how functionalizing agents (molecular dopants) may be designed to access specific behaviors. We measure photoluminescence (PL) decay dynamics of sp(3) defect states introduced by aryl functionalization of the carbon nanotube surface. Results are given for five different nanotube chiralities, each doped with a range of aryl functionality. We find that the PL decays of these sp(3) defect states are biexponential, with both components relaxing on time scales of ∼100 ps. Exciton trapping at defects is found to increases PL lifetimes by a factor of 5-10, in comparison to those for the free exciton. A significant chirality dependence is observed in the decay times, ranging from 77 ps for (7,5) nanotubes to >600 ps for (5,4) structures. The strong correlation of time constants with emission energy indicates relaxation occurs via multiphonon decay processes, with close agreement to theoretical expectations. Variation of the aryl dopant further modulates decay times by 10-15%. The aryl defects also affect PL lifetimes of the free E11 exciton. Shortening of the E11 bright state lifetime as defect density increases provides further confirmation that defects act as exciton traps. A similar shortening of the E11 dark exciton lifetime is found as defect density increases, providing strong experimental evidence that dark excitons are also trapped at such defect sites.


Small | 2014

Competition between Auger Recombination and Hot-Carrier Trapping in PL Intensity Fluctuations of Type II Nanocrystals

Benjamin D. Mangum; Feng Wang; Allison M. Dennis; Yongqian Gao; Xuedan Ma; Jennifer A. Hollingsworth; Han Htoon

Performing time-tagged, time-correlated, single-photon-counting studies on individual colloidal nanocrystal quantum dots (NQDs), the evolution of photoluminescence (PL) intensity-fluctuation behaviors in near-infrared (NIR) emitting type II, InP/CdS core-shell NQDs is investigated as a function of shell thickness. It is observed that Auger recombination and hot-carrier trapping compete in defining the PL intensity-fluctuation behavior for NQDs with thin shells, whereas the role of hot-carrier trapping dominates for NQDs with thick shells. These studies further reveal the distinct ramifications of altering either the excitation fluence or repetition rate. Specifically, an increase in laser pump fluence results in the creation of additional hot-carrier traps. Alternately, higher repetition rates cause a saturation in hot-carrier traps, thus activating Auger-related PL fluctuations. Furthermore, it is shown that Auger recombination of negatively charged excitons is suppressed more strongly than that of positively charged excitons because of the asymmetry in the electron-hole confinement in type II NQDs. Thus, this study provides new understanding of how both NQD structure (shell thickness and carrier-separation characteristics) and excitation conditions can be used to tune the PL stability, with important implications for room-temperature single-photon generation. Specifically, the first non-blinking NQD capable of single-photon emission in the near-infrared spectral regime is described.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Influences of Exciton Diffusion and Exciton-Exciton Annihilation on Photon Emission Statistics of Carbon Nanotubes

Xuedan Ma; Oleskiy Roslyak; Juan G. Duque; Xiaoying Pang; Stephen K. Doorn; Andrei Piryatinski; David H. Dunlap; Han Htoon

Pump-dependent photoluminescence imaging and second-order photon correlation studies have been performed on individual single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) at room temperature. These studies enable the extraction of both the exciton diffusion constant and the Auger recombination coefficient. A linear correlation between these parameters is attributed to the effect of environmental disorder in setting the exciton mean free path and capture-limited Auger recombination at this length scale. A suppression of photon antibunching is attributed to the creation of multiple spatially nonoverlapping excitons in SWCNTs, whose diffusion length is shorter than the laser spot size. We conclude that complete antibunching at room temperature requires an enhancement of the exciton-exciton annihilation rate that may become realizable in SWCNTs allowing for strong exciton localization.


ACS Nano | 2014

Influence of exciton dimensionality on spectral diffusion of single-walled carbon nanotubes.

Xuedan Ma; Oleksiy Roslyak; Feng Wang; Juan G. Duque; Andrei Piryatinski; Stephen K. Doorn; Han Htoon

We study temporal evolution of photoluminescence (PL) spectra from individual single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) at cryogenic and room temperatures. Sublinear and superlinear correlations between fluctuating PL spectral positions and line widths are observed at cryogenic and room temperatures, respectively. We develop a simple model to explain these two different spectral diffusion behaviors in the framework of quantum-confined Stark effect (QCSE) caused by surface charges trapped in the vicinity of SWCNTs. We show that the wave function properties of excitons, namely, localization at cryogenic temperature and delocalization at room temperature, play a critical role in defining sub- and superlinear correlations. Room temperature PL spectral positions and line widths of SWCNTs coupled to gold dimer nanoantennas on the other hand exhibit sublinear correlations, indicating that excitonic emission mainly originates from nanometer range regions and excitons appear to be localized. Our numerical simulations show that such apparent localization of excitons results from plasmonic confinement of excitation and an enhancement of decay rates in the gap of the dimer nanoantennas.


ACS Nano | 2017

Low-Temperature Single Carbon Nanotube Spectroscopy of sp3 Quantum Defects

Xiaowei He; Brendan J. Gifford; Nicolai Hartmann; Rachelle Ihly; Xuedan Ma; Svetlana Kilina; Yue Luo; Kamran Shayan; Stefan Strauf; Jeffrey L. Blackburn; Sergei Tretiak; Stephen K. Doorn; Han Htoon

Aiming to unravel the relationship between chemical configuration and electronic structure of sp3 defects of aryl-functionalized (6,5) single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs), we perform low-temperature single nanotube photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy studies and correlate our observations with quantum chemistry simulations. We observe sharp emission peaks from individual defect sites that are spread over an extremely broad, 1000-1350 nm, spectral range. Our simulations allow us to attribute this spectral diversity to the occurrence of six chemically and energetically distinct defect states resulting from topological variation in the chemical binding configuration of the monovalent aryl groups. Both PL emission efficiency and spectral line width of the defect states are strongly influenced by the local dielectric environment. Wrapping the SWCNT with a polyfluorene polymer provides the best isolation from the environment and yields the brightest emission with near-resolution limited spectral line width of 270 μeV, as well as spectrally resolved emission wings associated with localized acoustic phonons. Pump-dependent studies further revealed that the defect states are capable of emitting single, sharp, isolated PL peaks over 3 orders of magnitude increase in pump power, a key characteristic of two-level systems and an important prerequisite for single-photon emission with high purity. These findings point to the tremendous potential of sp3 defects in development of room temperature quantum light sources capable of operating at telecommunication wavelengths as the emission of the defect states can readily be extended to this range via use of larger diameter SWCNTs.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015

Matching Solid-State to Solution-Phase Photoluminescence for Near-Unity Down-Conversion Efficiency Using Giant Quantum Dots.

Christina J. Hanson; Matthew R. Buck; Krishna P. Acharya; Joseph A. Torres; Janardan Kundu; Xuedan Ma; Sarah J. Bouquin; Christopher E. Hamilton; Han Htoon; Jennifer A. Hollingsworth

Efficient, stable, and narrowband red-emitting fluorophores are needed as down-conversion materials for next-generation solid-state lighting that is both efficient and of high color quality. Semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) are nearly ideal color-shifting phosphors, but solution-phase efficiencies have not traditionally extended to the solid-state, with losses from both intrinsic and environmental effects. Here, we assess the impacts of temperature and flux on QD phosphor performance. By controlling QD core/shell structure, we realize near-unity down-conversion efficiency and enhanced operational stability. Furthermore, we show that a simple modification of the phosphor-coated light-emitting diode device-incorporation of a thin spacer layer-can afford reduced thermal or photon-flux quenching at high driving currents (>200 mA).


ACS Nano | 2017

Solitary Oxygen Dopant Emission from Carbon Nanotubes Modified by Dielectric Metasurfaces

Xuedan Ma; Anthony James; Nicolai Hartmann; Jon K. Baldwin; Jason Dominguez; Michael B. Sinclair; Ting S. Luk; Omri Wolf; Sheng Liu; Stephen K. Doorn; Han Htoon; Igal Brener

All-dielectric metasurfaces made from arrays of high index nanoresonators supporting strong magnetic dipole modes have emerged as a low-loss alternative to plasmonic metasurfaces. Here we use oxygen-doped single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) as quantum emitters and couple them to silicon metasurfaces to study effects of the magnetic dipole modes of the constituent nanoresonators on the photoluminescence (PL) of individual SWCNTs. We find that when in resonance, the magnetic mode of the silicon nanoresonators can lead to a moderate average PL enhancement of 0.8-4.0 of the SWCNTs, accompanied by an average increase in the radiative decay rate by a factor of 1.5-3.0. More interestingly, single dopant polarization experiments show an anomalous photoluminescence polarization rotation by coupling individual SWCNTs to silicon nanoresonators. Numerical simulations indicate that this is caused by modification of near-field polarization distribution at certain areas in the proximity of the silicon nanoresonators at the excitation wavelength, thus presenting an approach to control emission polarization. These findings indicate silicon nanoresonators as potential building blocks of quantum photonic circuits capable of manipulating PL intensity and polarization of single photon sources.


Modern Physics Letters B | 2015

Tailoring the photophysical properties of carbon nanotubes by photonic nanostructures

Xuedan Ma; Han Htoon

Single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) are nearly ideal one-dimensional systems with potential applications in a wide range of fields. The rich physics of SWCNTs arise from the excitonic nature of their photophysical properties. This review is focused on the results of novel research activities that explore how the photophysical properties of SWCNTs can be altered via their integration with photonic nanostructures including plasmonic structures and photonic microcavities that have resulted in phenomena such as photocurrent enhancement, selection rule breakdown and photoluminescence (PL) modification.

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Han Htoon

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Stephen K. Doorn

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Nicolai F. Hartmann

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Sibel Ebru Yalcin

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Jon K. Baldwin

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Sergei Tretiak

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Kirill A. Velizhanin

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Lyudmyla Adamska

University of South Florida

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Xiaowei He

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Andrei Piryatinski

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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