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JOURNALS // Pis'ma v Zhurnal Èksperimental'noi i Teoreticheskoi Fiziki // Archive

Pis'ma v Zh. Èksper. Teoret. Fiz., 2020 Volume 112, Issue 1, Pages 17–21 (Mi jetpl6204)

This article is cited in 6 papers

OPTICS AND NUCLEAR PHYSICS

Fourier transform limited linewidth of optical transitions in single SiV centers in “adamantane” nanodiamonds

A. M. Romshinab, O. S. Kudryavtseva, E. A. Ekimovc, A. B. Shkarind, D. Rattenbacherd, M. V. Rakhline, A. A. Toropove, I. I. Vlasova

a Prokhorov General Physics Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, 119991 Russia
b Moscow State University, Moscow, 119991 Russia
c Institute for High Pressure Physics, Russian Academy of Sciences, Troitsk, Moscow, 108840 Russia
d Max Planck Institute for the Science of Light (MPL), 91058 Erlangen, Germany
e Ioffe Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg, 194021 Russia

Abstract: Silicon-vacancy (SiV) color centers in diamond offer a promising system for quantum information applications owing to their intense narrowband emission and optically detectable spin states. Here, the fluorescent properties of ensembles and single SiV centers in diamonds obtained by high-pressure high-temperature synthesis from adamantane (below referred to as adamantane diamonds) are investigated at liquid-helium temperatures. Ensembles of SiV centers ($\sim$10$^3$) are studied in large diamond crystals (1–2 $\mu$m in size). Despite the large number of excited centers, the fine structure of the zero-phonon line, corresponding to four allowed optical transitions between the ground- and excited-state doublets of the SiV center, can be observed in the fluorescence spectra of these crystals. The width of individual lines is in the range of 60–80 GHz, which is explained by their inhomogeneous broadening. Single SiV centers are studied in diamond crystallites with sizes of about 200 nm. The width of the narrowest transition lines observed in the fluorescence spectra of single SiV centers under resonant excitation is almost three orders of magnitude smaller than linewidths in the spectra of SiV ensembles and is as small as 94 MHz; i.e., these lines are so narrow that their width is determined by the lifetime of the upper state of the transition. Therefore, adamantane nanodiamond features the narrowest emission line width of a single SiV center at cryogenic temperatures among other types of SiV-containing nanodiamonds of similar sizes obtained by the high-pressure high-temperature and chemical vapor deposition techniques.

Received: 10.05.2020
Revised: 13.05.2020
Accepted: 13.05.2020

DOI: 10.31857/S1234567820130030


 English version:
Journal of Experimental and Theoretical Physics Letters, 2020, 112:1, 13–16

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