Solid-state laser refrigeration of nanodiamond quantum sensors
Anupum Pant, R. Greg Felsted, Alexander B. Bard, Xiaojing Xia, Siamak, Dadras, Kamran Shayan, Danika R. Luntz-Martin, Donald Mannikko, Ilia M., Pavlovetc, Stefan Stoll, Masaru Kuno, A. Nick Vamivakas, Peter J. Pauzauskie

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates solid-state laser refrigeration of nanodiamond quantum sensors, enabling rapid optical temperature control and stabilization of NV centers, which enhances their performance in quantum sensing applications.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method of laser cooling nanodiamonds using ceramic microcrystals, allowing for fast temperature regulation and spectral stabilization of NV centers.
Findings
Nanodiamonds cooled by 10-27 K using laser refrigeration.
Temperature measured by DWF thermometry and ODMR agree.
Spectral wandering of NV centers stabilized via laser irradiance modulation.
Abstract
The negatively-charged nitrogen vacancy (NV) centre in diamond is a remarkable optical quantum sensor for a range of applications including, nanoscale thermometry, magnetometry, single photon generation, quantum computing, and communication. However, to date the performance of these techniques using NV centres has been limited by the thermally-induced spectral wandering of NV centre photoluminescence due to detrimental photothermal heating. Here we demonstrate that solid-state laser refrigeration can be used to enable rapid (ms) optical temperature control of nitrogen vacancy doped nanodiamond (NV:ND) quantum sensors in both atmospheric and \textit{in vacuo} conditions. Nanodiamonds are attached to ceramic microcrystals including 10\% ytterbium doped yttrium lithium fluoride (Yb:LiYF) and sodium yttrium fluoride (Yb:NaYF) by van der Waals bonding. The fluoride…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOptical properties and cooling technologies in crystalline materials · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Quantum Information and Cryptography
