Post-doc on the investigation by transmission electron microscopy of point defects and stacking faults in BN nanostructures

Project description: More and more technologies, implemented in nowadays devices or foreseen in next-generation ones, are or will be based on the intriguing properties of the quantum world. Applications include single-molecule and precise field sensing, quantum computing, single-particle emission/detection, twistronics and so on. They require the design and manipulation of materials at the nanometric scale, where the quantum nature of matter manifests itself (quantum materials). In this respect, nanoobjects and local singularities (e.g. point defects in crystals, exotic local spin textures, moiré patterns) are ideal supports for quantum-based technologies. The challenge is that of understanding and controlling at the atomic scale the very relation between their structure and the aimed properties.

The goal of this postdoctoral project is to carry out state-of-the-art experimental research on stacking and point defects of hexagonal boron nitride with the intent of elucidating the link between structure and properties. The systems of choice will include twisted interfaces, chemical defects and lattice reorganizations which may be natively present or generated on purpose. The project will stem from the recognized expertise of the laboratory on BN systems and will exploit the full potential of the recently acquired MOSTRA microscope. The machine, a JEOL probe-corrected NEOARM equipped with a cold FEG, capable of operating at 30, 60, 80 and 200 kV in all of its acquisition modes, brings together a unique set of functionalities and implements state-of-the-art techniques such as 4D-STEM and DPC. Furthermore, a customized CEOS Energy filter enables the acquisition of Angle-Resolved Electron Energy Loss (AR-EELS) maps, particularly relevant for the investigation of the dielectric function in anisotropic or angle-dependent systems (e.g. moiré physics).

In addition, the researcher will take advantage of other assets of the Laboratoire d’Etude des Microstructures (LEM) (https://lem.onera.cnrs.fr/en/home/). Direct access to dedicated synthesis and fabrication facilities (CVD, glove box) and to LEM’s dense network of collaborations (legacy of the Graphene Flagship, GDR HOWDI) will be crucial to provide samples for the study. Further development will be granted by the dialog with advanced atomistic simulations (ab initio and tight-binding) carried out in the laboratory and the lively context offered by ONERA, including access to other characterization methods (Raman, photoluminescence) and the connection with the Qtech laboratory which is devoted to applied studies on quantum materials.

Starting date : June 2025

Duration : 12 month, could be extended

Lab : Laboratoire d’Etude des Microstructures (LEM)

Contact person : annick.loiseau@onera.fr and hakim.amara@onera.fr

More details here !