APL Materials (Mar 2020)

Highly nitrogen-vacancy doped diamond nanostructures fabricated by ion implantation and optimum annealing

  • Hisashi Sumikura,
  • Kazuyuki Hirama,
  • Katsuhiko Nishiguchi,
  • Akihiko Shinya,
  • Masaya Notomi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0001922
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 3
pp. 031113 – 031113-7

Abstract

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Nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in diamond photonic nanostructures have attracted much attention as efficient single photon emitters and quantum bits. These quantum optical devices mostly require single or low-density NV centers doped in thin diamond membranes. In contrast, this study focuses on diamond photonic nanostructures with a high concentration of NV centers to achieve a diamond color center laser with a sufficient gain available as a visible light source and a sensitive magnetic-field sensor. We employ high-dose helium ion implantation to type-Ib diamond substrates and thermal annealing, which enables us to obtain uniform thin diamond membranes containing a dense ensemble of NV centers. Luminescence spectroscopy reveals the kinetics of NV centers at high temperature from which we find an optimum annealing temperature maximizing the NV center emission while suppressing the transformation from NV to H3 centers. Furthermore, fine photonic nanowires are also successfully fabricated in the air-suspended diamond membrane, and they exhibit intense photoluminescence from the NV centers with a concentration as high as 7 × 1016 cm−3 (0.4 ppm). These results suggest a route to the fabrication of diamond photonic nanostructures containing a dense ensemble of NV centers, which can be a key material for developing diamond-based light emitting and magnetic-field sensing devices.