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Narrowband photoluminescence of Tin-Vacancy colour centres in Sn-doped chemical vapour deposition diamond microcrystals.

Vadim S SedovArtem MartyanovArthur NeliubovIvan TiazhelovSergey SavinIvan Yu EremchevMaksim EremchevMargarita PavlenkoSoumen MandalVictor G RalchenkoAndrei V Naumov
Published in: Philosophical transactions. Series A, Mathematical, physical, and engineering sciences (2023)
Tin-Vacancy (Sn-V) colour centres in diamond have a spin coherence time in the millisecond range at temperatures of 2 K, so they are promising to be used in diamond-based quantum optical devices. However, the incorporation of large Sn atoms into a dense diamond lattice is a non-trivial problem. The objective of our work is to use microwave plasma-assisted chemical vapour deposition (CVD) to grow Sn-doped diamond with submicron SnO 2 particles as a solid-state source of impurity. Well-faceted diamond microcrystals with sizes of a few micrometres were formed on AlN substrates. The photoluminescence (PL) signal with zero-phonon line (ZPL) peak for Sn-V centre at ≈620 nm was measured at room temperature (RT) and at 7 K. The peak width (full width at half-maximum) was measured to be 1.1-1.7 nm at RT and ≈0.05 nm at 7 K. The observed variations of ZPL shape and position, in particular, narrowing of PL peak at RT and formation of single-line fine structure at low- T , are attributed to strain in the crystallites. The diamond doping with Sn via CVD process offers a new route to from Sn-V colour centre in the bulk of the diamond crystallites. This article is part of the Theo Murphy meeting issue 'Diamond for quantum applications'.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • quantum dots
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  • solid state
  • energy transfer
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  • high resolution
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  • perovskite solar cells
  • transition metal