Effects of low-energy electron irradiation on formation of nitrogen-vacancy centers in single-crystal diamond

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Abstract

Exposure to beams of low-energy electrons (2-30 keV) in a scanning electron microscope locally induces formation of NV-centers without thermal annealing in diamonds that have been implanted with nitrogen ions. We find that non-thermal, electron-beam-induced NV-formation is about four times less efficient than thermal annealing. But NV-center formation in a consecutive thermal annealing step (800 °C) following exposure to low-energy electrons increases by a factor of up to 1.8 compared to thermal annealing alone. These observations point to reconstruction of nitrogen-vacancy complexes induced by electronic excitations from low-energy electrons as an NV-center formation mechanism and identify local electronic excitations as a means for spatially controlled room-temperature NV-center formation. © IOP Publishing Ltd and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft.

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Schwartz, J., Aloni, S., Ogletree, D. F., & Schenkel, T. (2012). Effects of low-energy electron irradiation on formation of nitrogen-vacancy centers in single-crystal diamond. New Journal of Physics, 14. https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/14/4/043024

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