Deterministic Enhancement of Coherent Photon Generation from a Nitrogen-Vacancy Center in Ultrapure Diamond

The nitrogen-vacancy (NV) center in diamond has an optically addressable, highly coherent spin. However, a NV center even in high-quality single-crystalline material is a very poor source of single photons: Extraction out of the high-index diamond is inefficient, the emission of coherent photons rep...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physical review. X 2017-09, Vol.7 (3), p.031040, Article 031040
Hauptverfasser: Riedel, Daniel, Söllner, Immo, Shields, Brendan J., Starosielec, Sebastian, Appel, Patrick, Neu, Elke, Maletinsky, Patrick, Warburton, Richard J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The nitrogen-vacancy (NV) center in diamond has an optically addressable, highly coherent spin. However, a NV center even in high-quality single-crystalline material is a very poor source of single photons: Extraction out of the high-index diamond is inefficient, the emission of coherent photons represents just a few percent of the total emission, and the decay time is large. In principle, all three problems can be addressed with a resonant microcavity. In practice, it has proved difficult to implement this concept: Photonic engineering hinges on nanofabrication, yet it is notoriously difficult to process diamond without degrading the NV centers. Here, we present a microcavity scheme that uses minimally processed diamond, thereby preserving the high quality of the starting material and a tunable microcavity platform. We demonstrate a clear change in the lifetime for multiple individual NV centers on tuning both the cavity frequency and antinode position, a Purcell effect. The overall Purcell factor FP=2.0 translates to a Purcell factor for the zero phonon line (ZPL) of FPZPL∼30 and an increase in the ZPL emission probability from about 3% to 46%. By making a step change in the NV’s optical properties in a deterministic way, these results pave the way for much enhanced spin-photon and spin-spin entanglement rates.
ISSN:2160-3308
2160-3308
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevX.7.031040