The nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centre in diamond is emerging as a promising
platform for solid-state quantum information processing and nanoscale
metrology. Of interest in these applications is the manipulation of the NV
charge, which can be attained by optical excitation. Here we use two-color
optical microscopy to investigate the dynamics of NV photo-ionization, charge
diffusion, and trapping in type-1b diamond. We combine fixed-point laser
excitation and scanning fluorescence imaging to locally alter the concentration
of negatively charged NVs, and to subsequently probe the corresponding
redistribution of charge. We uncover the formation of spatial patterns of
trapped charge, which we qualitatively reproduce via a model of the interplay
between photo-excited carriers and atomic defects. Further, by using the NV as
a probe, we map the relative fraction of positively charged nitrogen upon
localized optical excitation. These observations may prove important to
transporting quantum information between NVs or to developing
three-dimensional, charge-based memories