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Magnetic detection under high pressures using designed silicon vacancy centres in silicon carbide.

Jun-Feng WangLin LiuXiao-Di LiuQiang LiJin-Ming CuiDi-Fan ZhouJi-Yang ZhouYu WeiHai-An XuWan XuWu-Xi LinJin-Wei YanZhen-Xuan HeZheng-Hao LiuZhi-He HaoHai-Ou LiWen LiuJin-Shi XuEugene GregoryanzChuan-Feng LiGuang-Can Guo
Published in: Nature materials (2023)
Pressure-induced magnetic phase transitions are attracting interest as a means to detect superconducting behaviour at high pressures in diamond anvil cells, but determining the local magnetic properties of samples is a challenge due to the small volumes of sample chambers. Optically detected magnetic resonance of nitrogen vacancy centres in diamond has recently been used for the in situ detection of pressure-induced phase transitions. However, owing to their four orientation axes and temperature-dependent zero-field splitting, interpreting these optically detected magnetic resonance spectra remains challenging. Here we study the optical and spin properties of implanted silicon vacancy defects in 4H-silicon carbide that exhibit single-axis and temperature-independent zero-field splitting. Using this technique, we observe the magnetic phase transition of Nd 2 Fe 14 B at about 7 GPa and map the critical temperature-pressure phase diagram of the superconductor YBa 2 Cu 3 O 6.6 . These results highlight the potential of silicon vacancy-based quantum sensors for in situ magnetic detection at high pressures.
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