Spin properties of dense near-surface ensembles of nitrogen-vacancy centres in diamond
J.-P. Tetienne, R. W. de Gille, D. A. Broadway, T. Teraji, S. E., Lillie, J. M. McCoey, N. Dontschuk, L. T. Hall, A. Stacey, D. A. Simpson, L., C. L. Hollenberg

TL;DR
This study investigates how various fabrication parameters affect the spin properties of dense near-surface NV centers in diamond, aiming to optimize their use in high-sensitivity quantum sensing and imaging.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of how implantation energy, dose, annealing temperature, and surface treatments influence NV center spin properties and magnetic sensitivity.
Findings
NV spin properties are mainly governed by implantation dose.
High-temperature annealing improves magnetic sensitivity.
Surface treatments have limited impact on spin coherence.
Abstract
We present a study of the spin properties of dense layers of near-surface nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centres in diamond created by nitrogen ion implantation. The optically detected magnetic resonance contrast and linewidth, spin coherence time, and spin relaxation time, are measured as a function of implantation energy, dose, annealing temperature and surface treatment. To track the presence of damage and surface-related spin defects, we perform in situ electron spin resonance spectroscopy through both double electron-electron resonance and cross-relaxation spectroscopy on the NV centres. We find that, for the energy (~keV) and dose (~ions/cm) ranges considered, the NV spin properties are mainly governed by the dose via residual implantation-induced paramagnetic defects, but that the resulting magnetic sensitivity is essentially independent of both dose and…
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