Engineering near-infrared single-photon emitters with optically active spins in ultrapure silicon carbide

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Abstract

Vacancy-related centres in silicon carbide are attracting growing attention because of their appealing optical and spin properties. These atomic-scale defects can be created using electron or neutron irradiation; however, their precise engineering has not been demonstrated yet. Here, silicon vacancies are generated in a nuclear reactor and their density is controlled over eight orders of magnitude within an accuracy down to a single vacancy level. An isolated silicon vacancy serves as a near-infrared photostable single-photon emitter, operating even at room temperature. The vacancy spins can be manipulated using an optically detected magnetic resonance technique, and we determine the transition rates and absorption cross-section, describing the intensity-dependent photophysics of these emitters. The on-demand engineering of optically active spins in technologically friendly materials is a crucial step toward implementation of both maser amplifiers, requiring high-density spin ensembles, and qubits based on single spins.

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Fuchs, F., Stender, B., Trupke, M., Simin, D., Pflaum, J., Dyakonov, V., & Astakhov, G. V. (2015). Engineering near-infrared single-photon emitters with optically active spins in ultrapure silicon carbide. Nature Communications, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms8578

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