| Literature DB >> 31532999 |
Matthias Widmann1, Matthias Niethammer1, Dmitry Yu Fedyanin2, Igor A Khramtsov2, Torsten Rendler1, Ian D Booker3, Jawad Ul Hassan3, Naoya Morioka1, Yu-Chen Chen1, Ivan G Ivanov3, Nguyen Tien Son3, Takeshi Ohshima4, Michel Bockstedte5,6, Adam Gali7,8, Cristian Bonato9, Sang-Yun Lee1,10, Jörg Wrachtrup1.
Abstract
Color centers with long-lived spins are established platforms for quantum sensing and quantum information applications. Color centers exist in different charge states, each of them with distinct optical and spin properties. Application to quantum technology requires the capability to access and stabilize charge states for each specific task. Here, we investigate charge state manipulation of individual silicon vacancies in silicon carbide, a system which has recently shown a unique combination of long spin coherence time and ultrastable spin-selective optical transitions. In particular, we demonstrate charge state switching through the bias applied to the color center in an integrated silicon carbide optoelectronic device. We show that the electronic environment defined by the doping profile and the distribution of other defects in the device plays a key role for charge state control. Our experimental results and numerical modeling evidence that control of these complex interactions can, under certain conditions, enhance the photon emission rate. These findings open the way for deterministic control over the charge state of spin-active color centers for quantum technology and provide novel techniques for monitoring doping profiles and voltage sensing in microscopic devices.Entities:
Keywords: materials science; multidisciplinary; nanotechnology; semiconductors
Year: 2019 PMID: 31532999 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b02774
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189