7 research outputs found
Charge State Dynamics and Optically Detected Electron Spin Resonance Contrast of Shallow Nitrogen-Vacancy Centers in Diamond
Nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in diamond can be used for nanoscale sensing
with atomic resolution and sensitivity; however, it has been observed that
their properties degrade as they approach the diamond surface. Here we report
that in addition to degraded spin coherence, NV centers within nanometers of
the surface can also exhibit decreased fluorescence contrast for optically
detected electron spin resonance (OD-ESR). We demonstrate that this decreased
OD-ESR contrast arises from charge state dynamics of the NV center, and that it
is strongly surface-dependent, indicating that surface engineering will be
critical for nanoscale sensing applications based on color centers in diamond
Neutral silicon vacancy centers in undoped diamond via surface control
Neutral silicon vacancy centers (SiV0) in diamond are promising candidates
for quantum networks because of their long spin coherence times and stable,
narrow optical transitions. However, stabilizing SiV0 requires high purity,
boron doped diamond, which is not a readily available material. Here, we
demonstrate an alternative approach via chemical control of the diamond
surface. We use low-damage chemical processing and annealing in a hydrogen
environment to realize reversible and highly stable charge state tuning in
undoped diamond. The resulting SiV0 centers display optically detected magnetic
resonance and bulk-like optical properties. Controlling the charge state tuning
via surface termination offers a route for scalable technologies based on SiV0
centers, as well as charge state engineering of other defects
Diamond Surface Functionalization via Visible Light-Driven C-H Activation for Nanoscale Quantum Sensing
Nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond are a promising platform for nanoscale
nuclear magnetic resonance sensing. Despite significant progress towards using
NV centers to detect and localize nuclear spins down to the single spin level,
NV-based spectroscopy of individual, intact, arbitrary target molecules remains
elusive. NV molecular sensing requires that target molecules are immobilized
within a few nanometers of NV centers with long spin coherence time. The inert
nature of diamond typically requires harsh functionalization techniques such as
thermal annealing or plasma processing, limiting the scope of functional groups
that can be attached to the surface. Solution-phase chemical methods can be
more readily generalized to install diverse functional groups, but they have
not been widely explored for single-crystal diamond surfaces. Moreover,
realizing shallow NV centers with long spin coherence times requires highly
ordered single-crystal surfaces, and solution-phase functionalization has not
yet been shown to be compatible with such demanding conditions. In this work,
we report a versatile strategy to directly functionalize C-H bonds on
single-crystal diamond surfaces under ambient conditions using visible light.
This functionalization method is compatible with charge stable NV centers
within 10 nm of the surface with spin coherence times comparable to the state
of the art. As a proof of principle, we use shallow ensembles of NV centers to
detect nuclear spins from functional groups attached to the surface. Our
approach to surface functionalization based on visible light-driven C-H bond
activation opens the door to deploying NV centers as a broad tool for chemical
sensing and single-molecule spectroscopy
Recommended from our members
Biocompatible surface functionalization architecture for a diamond quantum sensor
Quantum metrology enables some of the most precise measurements. In the life sciences, diamond-based quantum sensing has led to a new class of biophysical sensors and diagnostic devices that are being investigated as a platform for cancer screening and ultrasensitive immunoassays. However, a broader application in the life sciences based on nanoscale NMR spectroscopy has been hampered by the need to interface highly sensitive quantum bit (qubit) sensors with their biological targets. Here, we demonstrate an approach that combines quantum engineering with single-molecule biophysics to immobilize individual proteins and DNA molecules on the surface of a bulk diamond crystal that hosts coherent nitrogen vacancy qubit sensors. Our thin (sub–5 nm) functionalization architecture provides precise control over the biomolecule adsorption density and results in near-surface qubit coherence approaching 100 μs. The developed architecture remains chemically stable under physiological conditions for over 5 d, making our technique compatible with most biophysical and biomedical applications
Disentangling Losses in Tantalum Superconducting Circuits
Superconducting qubits are a leading system for realizing large-scale quantum processors, but overall gate fidelities suffer from coherence times limited by microwave dielectric loss. Recently discovered tantalum-based qubits exhibit record lifetimes exceeding 0.3 ms. Here, we perform systematic, detailed measurements of superconducting tantalum resonators in order to disentangle sources of loss that limit state-of-the-art tantalum devices. By studying the dependence of loss on temperature, microwave photon number, and device geometry, we quantify materials-related losses and observe that the losses are dominated by several types of saturable two-level systems (TLSs), with evidence that both surface and bulk related TLSs contribute to loss. Moreover, we show that surface TLSs can be altered with chemical processing. With four different surface conditions, we quantitatively extract the linear absorption associated with different surface TLS sources. Finally, we quantify the impact of the chemical processing at single-photon powers, the relevant conditions for qubit device performance. In this regime, we measure resonators with internal quality factors ranging from 5 to 15×10^{6}, comparable to the best qubits reported. In these devices, the surface and bulk TLS contributions to loss are comparable, showing that systematic improvements in materials on both fronts are necessary to improve qubit coherence further