Fabrication of single color centers in sub-50 nm nanodiamonds using ion implantation.

Nanophotonics

Elmore Family School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Birck Nanotechnology Center, Purdue Quantum Science and Engineering Institute (PQSEI), Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA.

Published: February 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Diamond color centers, especially the negatively charged silicon vacancy (SiV) center, are important in quantum optics due to their narrow emission linewidth and favorable spin properties, making them suitable for various technologies.
  • - Nanodiamond (ND)-based SiV centers can be integrated into advanced structures for applications like biological imaging and sensing, and ion implantation is a key method for creating specific numbers of these color centers.
  • - The study successfully created single SiV centers in nanodiamonds, showing stable single-photon emission at room temperature, which opens new possibilities for advancements in quantum photonics, sensing, and biomedicine.

Article Abstract

Diamond color centers have been widely studied in the field of quantum optics. The negatively charged silicon vacancy (SiV) center exhibits a narrow emission linewidth at the wavelength of 738 nm, a high Debye-Waller factor, and unique spin properties, making it a promising emitter for quantum information technologies, biological imaging, and sensing. In particular, nanodiamond (ND)-based SiV centers can be heterogeneously integrated with plasmonic and photonic nanostructures and serve as biomarkers and intracellular thermometers. Out of all methods to produce NDs with SiV centers, ion implantation offers the unique potential to create controllable numbers of color centers in preselected individual NDs. However, the formation of single color centers in NDs with this technique has not been realized. We report the creation of single SiV centers featuring stable high-purity single-photon emission through Si implantation into NDs with an average size of ∼20 nm. We observe room temperature emission, with zero-phonon line wavelengths in the range of 730-800 nm and linewidths below 10 nm. Our results offer new opportunities for the controlled production of group-IV diamond color centers with applications in quantum photonics, sensing, and biomedicine.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11501155PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/nanoph-2022-0678DOI Listing

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