Purcell effect of nitrogen-vacancy centers in nanodiamond coupled to propagating and localized surface plasmons revealed by photon-correlation cathodoluminescence
Sotatsu Yanagimoto, Naoki Yamamoto, Takumi Sannomiya, Keiichirou Akiba

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the Purcell effect in nitrogen-vacancy centers within nanodiamonds when coupled to surface plasmons, using advanced cathodoluminescence techniques to measure lifetime changes at nanometer and nanosecond scales.
Contribution
First experimental observation of Purcell effect in NV centers coupled to surface plasmon polaritons with nanometer resolution using cathodoluminescence and Hanbury Brown-Twiss interferometry.
Findings
Lifetime reduction observed in NV centers near silver structures
Coupling to propagating and localized surface plasmons confirmed
Quantitative analysis aligns with analytical and numerical models
Abstract
We measured the second-order correlation function of the cathodoluminescence intensity and investigated the Purcell effect by comparing the lifetimes of quantum emitters with and without metal structure. The increase in the electromagnetic local density of state due to the coupling of a quantum emitter with a plasmonic structure causes a shortening of the emitter lifetime, which is called the Purcell effect. Since the plasmon-enhanced electric field is confined well below the wavelength of light, the quantum emitter lifetime is changed in the nanoscale range. In this study, we combined cathodoluminescence in scanning (transmission) electron microscopy with Hanbury Brown-Twiss interferometry to measure the Purcell effect with nanometer and nanosecond resolutions. We used nitrogen-vacancy centers contained in nanodiamonds as quantum emitters and compared their lifetime in different…
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