| Literature DB >> 26510889 |
Jacopo Forneris1, Paolo Traina2, Daniele Gatto Monticone1, Giampiero Amato2, Luca Boarino2, Giorgio Brida2, Ivo P Degiovanni2, Emanuele Enrico2, Ekaterina Moreva2, Veljko Grilj3, Natko Skukan3, Milko Jakšić3, Marco Genovese2, Paolo Olivero1.
Abstract
Focused MeV ion beams with micrometric resolution are suitable tools for the direct writing of conductive graphitic channels buried in an insulating diamond bulk, as already demonstrated for different device applications. In this work we apply this fabrication method to the electrical excitation of color centers in diamond, demonstrating the potential of electrical stimulation in diamond-based single-photon sources. Differently from optically-stimulated light emission from color centers in diamond, electroluminescence (EL) requires a high current flowing in the diamond subgap states between the electrodes. With this purpose, buried graphitic electrode pairs, 10 μm spaced, were fabricated in the bulk of a single-crystal diamond sample using a 6 MeV C microbeam. The electrical characterization of the structure showed a significant current injection above an effective voltage threshold of 150 V, which enabled the stimulation of a stable EL emission. The EL imaging allowed to identify the electroluminescent regions and the residual vacancy distribution associated with the fabrication technique. Measurements evidenced isolated electroluminescent spots where non-classical light emission in the 560-700 nm spectral range was observed. The spectral and auto-correlation features of the EL emission were investigated to qualify the non-classical properties of the color centers.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26510889 PMCID: PMC4625126 DOI: 10.1038/srep15901
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Overview of the single-photon electroluminescent device.
(a) Two parallel buried electrodes are ion-microbeam-fabricated in single-crystal diamond and wire-bonded to an external voltage supply. The current flowing between the electrodes stimulates the electroluminescent emission from isolated color centers. (b) Optical micrographs of the device under investigation with a schematic representation of the electrical connections. The bottom image is a magnification of the area highlighted by the red rectangle.
Figure 2Charge-injection from sub-superficial electrodes.
(a) I-V characteristic of the device. The red and blue lines indicate the curves acquired at increasing and decreasing voltage, respectively. (b) Plot in linear scale of the ohmic I-V behavior in the 0–95 V range. (c) Highlight of the PF behavior above the critical voltage V. The quantities reported on the axes are chosen to linearize the PF expression I ∝ V sinh(aV1/2/kT).
Figure 3Mapping of luminescent emission.
(a) PL map acquired with a λ = 532 nm laser excitation from the region highlighted by the black rectangle in Fig. 1b. (b) EL map (215 V bias) from the region highlighted by the white rectangle in Fig. 3a. The dashed black lines indicate the relative position of the electrodes.
Figure 4Non-classical EL emission.
(a) PL (λ = 532 nm excitation) and (b) EL (240 V bias) spectra acquired from the bright spot in the gray square in Fig. 3b. (c) Reference EL spectrum acquired at 500 V applied bias from an “optical grade” device fabricated with a 6 MeV C3+ microbeam. (d) C(t) curve acquired from the black circled spot in Fig. 3b. The curve is not corrected by background removal.