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ScSI, a missing member of the rare earth sulfoiodide (RESI) family of materials, has been synthesized for the first time. ScSI crystallizes in the FeOCl structure type, space group Pmmn (No. 59), a = 3.8904(2), b = 5.0732(9), c = 8.9574(6) Å. Both hyperspectral reflectance measurements and ab initio calculations support the presence of an indirect optical band gap of 2.0 eV. The bulk crystal is found to be readily exfoliatable, enabling its use as an optical component in novel heterostructures. The impact of lithium intercalation on its electronic band structure is also explored. A broader correlation is drawn between the observed structural trends in all known 1:1:1 sulfoiodide phases, cationic proportions, and electronic considerations. The realization of this phase both fills a significant synthetic gap in the literature and presents a novel exfoliatable phase for use as an optical component in next-generation heterostructure devices.more » « less
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Abstract Point defects in hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) have attracted growing attention as bright single-photon emitters. However, understanding of their atomic structure and radiative properties remains incomplete. Here we study the excited states and radiative lifetimes of over 20 native defects and carbon or oxygen impurities in hBN using ab initio density functional theory and GW plus Bethe-Salpeter equation calculations, generating a large data set of their emission energy, polarization and lifetime. We find a wide variability across quantum emitters, with exciton energies ranging from 0.3 to 4 eV and radiative lifetimes from ns to ms for different defect structures. Through a Bayesian statistical analysis, we identify various high-likelihood charge-neutral defect emitters, among which the native VNNBdefect is predicted to possess emission energy and radiative lifetime in agreement with experiments. Our work advances the microscopic understanding of hBN single-photon emitters and introduces a computational framework to characterize and identify quantum emitters in 2D materials.