Near-unity charge state initialization and better spin state readout of NV centers in diamond via multi-color excitation
ORAL
Abstract
Nitrogen-Vacancy (NV) centers in diamond are excellent quantum sensors for their long spin coherence times and optical spin readout under ambient conditions. However, they suffer from significant NV- state preparation and measurement errors of up to 30%, due to charge dynamics under off-resonant green excitation. A promising method to mitigate this issue is multicolor excitation with green and near-infrared wavelengths, which alters the relative ionization and recombination rates to achieve 91% fidelity initialization [1]. Previous demonstrations of this approach required high excitation powers and extended exposure times. By rigorously analyzing experimental parameters, we identified conditions where simultaneous near-infrared (905 nm) and green (520 nm) illumination at moderate power achieves near-unity NV charge initialization within 10 μs. We show that this multicolor initialization not only maintains the spin polarization but also reduces readout noise compared to green initialization due to enhanced NV- charge preparation fidelity. We also demonstrate that this technique is effective for state-of-the-art shallow NV centers, within 10 nm of the diamond surface. This increased initialization fidelity paves the way for high-fidelity multiplexed measurements [2] and measuring higher order correlation functions [3].
[1] Hopper, et al., Physical Review B 94, 241201 (2016)
[2] Cheng, et al., arXiv preprint arXiv:2408.11666 (2024)
[3] Rovny, et al., Science 378.6626 (2022): 1301-1305
[1] Hopper, et al., Physical Review B 94, 241201 (2016)
[2] Cheng, et al., arXiv preprint arXiv:2408.11666 (2024)
[3] Rovny, et al., Science 378.6626 (2022): 1301-1305
*This work was primarily supported by the US Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, under Award No. DE-SC0018978. Diamond surface preparation was supported by the NSF under the CAREER program (grant DMR1752047). The authors also acknowledge the use of the Imaging and Analysis Center (IAC) operated by the Princeton Materials Institute at Princeton University, which is supported in part by the Princeton Center for Complex Materials (PCCM), a National Science Foundation (NSF) Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (MRSEC; DMR-2011750).
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Presenters
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Marjana Mahdia
- Princeton University