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Proximal nitrogen reduces the fluorescence quantum yield of nitrogen-vacancy centres in diamond

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 19:42 authored by Marco Capelli, Lukas Lindner, Brett Johnson, Alastair StaceyAlastair Stacey, Philipp ReineckPhilipp Reineck, Brant GibsonBrant Gibson, Andrew GreentreeAndrew Greentree
The nitrogen-vacancy colour centre in diamond is emerging as one of the most important solid-state quantum systems. It has applications to fields including high-precision sensing, quantum computing, single photon communication, metrology, nanoscale magnetic imaging and biosensing. For all of these applications, a high quantum yield of emitted photons is desirable. However, diamond samples engineered to have high densities of nitrogen-vacancy centres show levels of brightness varying significantly within single batches, or even within the same sample. Here we show that nearby nitrogen impurities quench emission of nitrogen-vacancy centres via non-radiative transitions, resulting in a reduced fluorescence quantum yield. We monitored the emission properties of nitrogen-vacancy centre ensembles from synthetic diamond samples with different concentrations of nitrogen impurities. All samples were irradiated with high energy electrons to create high densities of nitrogen-vacancy centres relative to the concentration of nitrogen impurities. While at low nitrogen densities of 1.81 ppm we measured a lifetime of 13.9 ns, we observed a strong reduction in lifetime with increasing nitrogen density. We measure a lifetime as low as 4.4 ns at a nitrogen density of 380 ppm. The change in lifetime matches a reduction in relative fluorescence quantum yield from 77.4% to 32% with an increase in nitrogen density from 88 ppm to 380 ppm, respectively. These results will inform the conditions required to optimise the properties of diamond crystals devices based on the fluorescence of nitrogen-vacancy centres. Furthermore, this work provides insights into the origin of inhomogeneities observed in high-density nitrogen-vacancy ensembles within diamonds and nanodiamonds.

Funding

ARC Centre of Excellence for Nanoscale BioPhotonics

Australian Research Council

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History

Journal

New Journal of Physics

Volume

24

Number

033053

Issue

3

Start page

2

End page

10

Total pages

9

Publisher

Institute of Physics

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2022 The Author(s).Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence.

Former Identifier

2006113982

Esploro creation date

2022-05-28

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