Electroluminescence from a diamond device with ion-beam-micromachined buried graphitic electrodes
J. Forneris, A. Battiato, D. Gatto Monticone, F. Picollo, G. Amato, L., Boarino, G. Brida, I. P. Degiovanni, E. Enrico, M. Genovese, E. Moreva, P., Traina, C. Verona, G. Verona-Rinati, P. Olivero

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the fabrication of buried graphitic electrodes in diamond using ion microbeams, enabling electrical excitation of colour centres and revealing potential for quantum optics applications.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method for electrically stimulating colour centres in diamond via ion-beam-micromachined buried electrodes, advancing quantum emitter development.
Findings
Electroluminescence from NV0 centres was observed.
He-related defect emission was detected at room temperature.
Potential for electrically-stimulated single-photon emitters in diamond.
Abstract
Focused MeV ion microbeams are suitable tools for the direct writing of conductive graphitic channels buried in an insulating diamond bulk, as demonstrated in previous works with the fabrication of multi-electrode ionizing radiation detectors and cellular biosensors. In this work we investigate the suitability of the fabrication method for the electrical excitation of colour centres in diamond. Differently from photoluminescence, electroluminescence requires an electrical current flowing through the diamond sub-gap states for the excitation of the colour centres. With this purpose, buried graphitic electrodes with a spacing of 10 micrometers were fabricated in the bulk of a detector-grade CVD single-crystal diamond sample using a scanning 1.8 MeV He micro-beam. The current flowing in the gap region between the electrodes upon the application of a 250 V bias voltage was exploited as the…
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