Creating diamond color centers for quantum optical applications
F. C. Waldermann, P. Olivero, J. Nunn, K. Surmacz, Z. Y.Wang, D., Jaksch, R. A. Taylor, I. A. Walmsley, M. Draganski, P. Reichart, A. D., Greentree, D. N. Jamieson, S. Prawer

TL;DR
This study investigates how ion implantation and annealing affect the formation and optical properties of nitrogen vacancy centers in diamond, aiming to optimize their use as solid-state qubits for quantum computing.
Contribution
It provides detailed analysis of photoluminescence from NV centers created by ion implantation, revealing optimal conditions to minimize damage and improve qubit quality.
Findings
PL intensities vary non-monotonically with ion fluence
NV center ratios increase monotonically with fluence
Zero-phonon line broadening increases with ion fluence
Abstract
Nitrogen vacancy (NV) centers in diamond have distinct promise as solid-state qubits. This is because of their large dipole moment, convenient level structure and very long room-temperature coherence times. In general, a combination of ion irradiation and subsequent annealing is used to create the centers, however for the rigorous demands of quantum computing all processes need to be optimized, and decoherence due to the residual damage caused by the implantation process itself must be mitigated. To that end we have studied photoluminescence (PL) from NV, NV and GR1 centers formed by ion implantation of 2MeV He ions over a wide range of fluences. The sample was annealed at C to minimize residual vacancy diffusion, allowing for the concurrent analysis of PL from NV centers and irradiation induced vacancies (GR1). We find non-monotic PL intensities with increasing ion…
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