AI Article Synopsis

  • Diamond's unique properties make it ideal for quantum and electronic tech, but its growth on other materials is limited, affecting technology integration.
  • The researchers developed a method to directly bond single-crystal diamond membranes to various materials, achieving minimal contamination and consistent quality.
  • Their ultra-thin diamond membranes show potential for high-performance quantum applications and compatibility with advanced microscopy techniques, paving the way for new hybrid systems in technology.

Article Abstract

Diamond has superlative material properties for a broad range of quantum and electronic technologies. However, heteroepitaxial growth of single crystal diamond remains limited, impeding integration and evolution of diamond-based technologies. Here, we directly bond single-crystal diamond membranes to a wide variety of materials including silicon, fused silica, sapphire, thermal oxide, and lithium niobate. Our bonding process combines customized membrane synthesis, transfer, and dry surface functionalization, allowing for minimal contamination while providing pathways for near unity yield and scalability. We generate bonded crystalline membranes with thickness as low as 10 nm, sub-nm interfacial regions, and nanometer-scale thickness variability over 200 by 200 μm areas. We measure spin coherence times T for nitrogen vacancy centers in 150 nm-thick bonded membranes of up to 623 ± 21 μs, suitable for advanced quantum applications. We demonstrate multiple methods for integrating high quality factor nanophotonic cavities with the diamond heterostructures, highlighting the platform versatility in quantum photonic applications. Furthermore, we show that our ultra-thin diamond membranes are compatible with total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy, which enables interfacing coherent diamond quantum sensors with living cells while rejecting unwanted background luminescence. The processes demonstrated herein provide a full toolkit to synthesize heterogeneous diamond-based hybrid systems for quantum and electronic technologies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11467219PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-53150-3DOI Listing

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