Resolving isotope splitting of boron-related intracenter transitions in diamond by infrared absorption spectroscopy
Dmitrii Prikhodko, Sergey Pavlov, Sergey Tarelkin, Vitaly Bormashov,, Mikhail Kuznetsov, Sergey Terentiev, Sergey Nosukhin, Sergey Troschiev,, Heinz-Wilhelm H\"ubers, Vladimir Blank

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that infrared absorption spectroscopy can resolve isotope splitting in boron-related intracenter transitions in diamond, revealing the largest impurity isotopic shift observed in semiconductors.
Contribution
The paper introduces a method to differentiate boron isotopes in diamond via infrared absorption spectra, highlighting the largest impurity isotopic shift in hydrogen-like centers.
Findings
Isotopic spectral lines are separated by about 0.7 meV.
Infrared absorption spectroscopy can distinguish 10B and 11B intracenter transitions.
Largest impurity isotopic shift observed in semiconductors for hydrogen-like centers.
Abstract
Isotopic enrichment offers cutting-edge properties of materials opening exciting research and development opportunities. In semiconductors, reached progress of ultimate control in growth and doping techniques follows nowadays the high level isotopic purification. This requires deep understanding of isotopic disorder effects and techniques of their effective determination. Isotopic content of both crystal lattice and impurity centers cause the effects, which can be examined by different optical techniques. While disorder in the host lattice can be straight forward evaluated by inelastic light scattering or by SIMS measurements, determination of isotopic contributions of many orders less presented impurities remains challenging and usually observed in high-resolution photoluminescence or optical absorption spectra. Boron-doped diamonds exhibit complex infrared absorption spectra while…
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