Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5432413 | Carbon | 2017 | 11 Pages |
The control of the charge state of nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in diamond is of primary importance for the stabilization of their quantum-optical properties, in applications ranging from quantum sensing to quantum computing. In this work buried current-injecting graphitic micro-electrodes were fabricated in bulk diamond by means of a 6Â MeVÂ C3+ scanning micro-beam. The electrodes were exploited to control the variation in the relative population of the negative (NVâ) and neutral (NV0) charge states of a sub-superficial NV centers ensemble located in the inter-electrode gap region. Photoluminescence spectra exhibited an electrically-induced increase up to 40% in the NVâ population at the expense of the NV0 charge state, with a linear dependence from the injected current at applied biases smaller than 350Â V, and was interpreted as the result of electron trapping at NV sites. An abrupt current increase at â¼350Â V bias resulted in a strong electroluminescence from the NV0 centers, in addition to two spectrally sharp emission lines at 563.5Â nm and 580Â nm, not visible under optical excitation and attributed to self-interstitial defects. These results disclose new possibilities in the electrical control of the charge state of NV centers located in the diamond bulk, which are characterized by longer spin coherence times.
Graphical abstractDownload high-res image (157KB)Download full-size image