Pinpointing the glow of a single atom


Dec 11, 2025

Researchers have discovered how to design and place single-photon sources at the atomic scale inside ultrathin 2D materials, lighting the path for future quantum innovations.

(Nanowerk News) Like perfectly controlled light switches, quantum emitters can turn on the flow of single particles of light, called photons, one at a time. These tiny switches — the “bits” of many quantum technologies — are created by atomic-scale defects in materials. Their ability to produce light with such precision makes them essential for the future of quantum technologies, including quantum computing, secure communication and ultraprecise sensing. But finding and controlling these atomic light switches has been a major scientific challenge — until now. Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory and the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign have made a breakthrough in understanding and controlling quantum emitters. At the Center for Nanoscale Materials (CNM), a DOE Office of Science user facility at Argonne, the team used a state-of-the-art, specialized microscope called QuEEN-M (Quantum Emitter Electron Nanomaterial Microscope) to pinpoint and even create quantum emitters in an ultrathin material known as hexagonal boron nitride. By figuring out the atomic structure responsible for light emission, the researchers have opened the door to designing materials with custom quantum properties for future devices. The ork has been published in Advanced Materials (“Nanometer Resolution Structure‐Emission Correlation of Individual Quantum Emitters via Enhanced Cathodoluminescence in Twisted Hexagonal Boron Nitride”). The QuEEN-M instrument The QuEEN-M at the CNM, used to pinpoint and create quantum emitters in hexagonal boron nitride, enables breakthroughs in quantum technology research. (Image: Jianguo Wen, Argonne National Laboratory) “The challenge in studying quantum emitters is that their optical behavior is determined by their atomic structure, which is very hard to observe directly,” said Jianguo Wen, an Argonne materials scientist. Studying the light emission from quantum emitters usually requires thicker samples, while analyzing their atomic structure needs thinner samples. This tradeoff has made it difficult to fully understand these tiny light sources. To solve this problem, Wen and his team used a technique called cathodoluminescence spectroscopy, along with the high-resolution QuEEN-M microscope. In cathodoluminescence, a focused beam of electrons excites the material, causing it to emit light. The color and intensity of the emitted light reveal information about what the quantum emitter is made of and its defect sites. “The QuEEN-M is a specially designed electron microscope that takes advantage of modern electron optics and detectors,” added Jian-Min Zuo, Illinois Grainger Engineering professor of materials science and engineering. ​“Research infrastructure like this is essential for advancing future technology.” The team discovered that twisting layers of hexagonal boron nitride at certain angles — a process that creates ​“twisted interfaces” — makes the light signal from quantum emitters much stronger, sometimes by up to 120 times. This stronger signal allowed the researchers to pinpoint the location of the emitters with incredible accuracy, down to less than 10 nanometers, or 10 billionths of a meter. Using this powerful approach, the team identified the atomic structure of a blue quantum emitter in hexagonal boron nitride as a pair of vertically stacked carbon atoms, known as a carbon dimer. Even more impressively, the researchers showed that they could create these quantum emitters on demand by adding carbon to the material and using the electron beam to activate emitters at chosen spots. “Once we could connect the atomic structure with the light it gives off, it opened the door to precise engineering of these quantum emitters,” Argonne scientist Thomas Gage explained. ​“We can now create and adjust them on demand using an electron beam.” This ability to engineer quantum emitters with such precision marks a significant step forward for quantum technology. “The ability to place these photons with high accuracy is crucial for tomorrow’s quantum devices,” noted Argonne scientist Benjamin Diroll. This research makes it possible to build materials with custom quantum properties that can be placed exactly where needed on a chip. By doing this, scientists can connect these materials with other technologies to boost signals and share information more efficiently. This breakthrough will help speed up the creation of future quantum technologies.

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