| Literature DB >> 29434307 |
T Astner1, J Gugler2, A Angerer3, S Wald3, S Putz3,4, N J Mauser5, M Trupke3,6, H Sumiya7, S Onoda8, J Isoya9, J Schmiedmayer3, P Mohn2, J Majer10.
Abstract
Longitudinal relaxation is the process by which an excited spin ensemble decays into its thermal equilibrium with the environment. In solid-state spin systems, relaxation into the phonon bath usually dominates over the coupling to the electromagnetic vacuum1-9. In the quantum limit, the spin lifetime is determined by phononic vacuum fluctuations 10 . However, this limit was not observed in previous studies due to thermal phonon contributions11-13 or phonon-bottleneck processes10, 14,15. Here we use a dispersive detection scheme16,17 based on cavity quantum electrodynamics18-21 to observe this quantum limit of spin relaxation of the negatively charged nitrogen vacancy (NV-) centre 22 in diamond. Diamond possesses high thermal conductivity even at low temperatures 23 , which eliminates phonon-bottleneck processes. We observe exceptionally long longitudinal relaxation times T1 of up to 8 h. To understand the fundamental mechanism of spin-phonon coupling in this system we develop a theoretical model and calculate the relaxation time ab initio. The calculations confirm that the low phononic density of states at the NV- transition frequency enables the spin polarization to survive over macroscopic timescales.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29434307 DOI: 10.1038/s41563-017-0008-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841