TY - JOUR
T1 - Efficient Generation of an Array of Single Silicon-Vacancy Defects in Silicon Carbide
AU - Wang, Junfeng
AU - Zhou, Yu
AU - Zhang, Xiaoming
AU - Liu, Fucai
AU - Li, Yan
AU - Li, Ke
AU - Liu, Zheng
AU - Wang, Guanzhong
AU - Gao, Weibo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 American Physical Society.
PY - 2017/6/16
Y1 - 2017/6/16
N2 - Color centers in silicon carbide have increasingly attracted attention in recent years owing to their excellent properties such as single-photon emission, good photostability, and long spin-coherence time even at room temperature. As compared to diamond, which is widely used for hosting nitrogen-vacancy centers, silicon carbide has an advantage in terms of large-scale, high-quality, and low-cost growth, as well as an advanced fabrication technique in optoelectronics, leading to prospects for large-scale quantum engineering. In this paper, we report an experimental demonstration of the generation of a single-photon-emitter array through ion implantation. VSi defects are generated in predetermined locations with high generation efficiency (approximately 19%±4%). The single emitter probability reaches approximately 34%±4% when the ion-implantation dose is properly set. This method serves as a critical step in integrating single VSi defect emitters with photonic structures, which, in turn, can improve the emission and collection efficiency of VSi defects when they are used in a spin photonic quantum network. On the other hand, the defects are shallow, and they are generated about 40 nm below the surface which can serve as a critical resource in quantum-sensing applications.
AB - Color centers in silicon carbide have increasingly attracted attention in recent years owing to their excellent properties such as single-photon emission, good photostability, and long spin-coherence time even at room temperature. As compared to diamond, which is widely used for hosting nitrogen-vacancy centers, silicon carbide has an advantage in terms of large-scale, high-quality, and low-cost growth, as well as an advanced fabrication technique in optoelectronics, leading to prospects for large-scale quantum engineering. In this paper, we report an experimental demonstration of the generation of a single-photon-emitter array through ion implantation. VSi defects are generated in predetermined locations with high generation efficiency (approximately 19%±4%). The single emitter probability reaches approximately 34%±4% when the ion-implantation dose is properly set. This method serves as a critical step in integrating single VSi defect emitters with photonic structures, which, in turn, can improve the emission and collection efficiency of VSi defects when they are used in a spin photonic quantum network. On the other hand, the defects are shallow, and they are generated about 40 nm below the surface which can serve as a critical resource in quantum-sensing applications.
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U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevApplied.7.064021
DO - 10.1103/PhysRevApplied.7.064021
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85021087279
SN - 2331-7019
VL - 7
JO - Physical Review Applied
JF - Physical Review Applied
IS - 6
M1 - 064021
ER -