Towards Deterministic Creation of Single Photon Sources in Diamond using In-Situ Ion Counting
M. Titze, H. Byeon, A. R. Flores, J. Henshaw, C. T. Harris, A. M., Mounce, E. S. Bielejec

TL;DR
This paper introduces an in-situ ion counting method that significantly reduces implantation errors, enabling more reliable creation of single photon sources in diamond for quantum technologies.
Contribution
The study demonstrates a novel in-situ ion detection technique that reduces implantation errors and improves the accuracy of creating single SiV defect emitters in diamond.
Findings
Error on ion number reduced to 5% with in-situ detection
82% of locations exhibit single photon emission statistics
Yield of SiV emitters is approximately 3%
Abstract
We present an in-situ counted ion implantation experiment reducing the error on the ion number to 5 % enabling the fabrication of high-yield single photon emitter devices in wide bandgap semiconductors for quantum applications. Typical focused ion beam implantation relies on knowing the beam current and setting a pulse length of the ion pulse to define the number of ions implanted at each location, referred to as timed implantation in this paper. This process is dominated by Poisson statistics resulting in large errors for low number of implanted ions. Instead, we use in-situ detection to measure the number of ions arriving at the substrate resulting in a two-fold reduction in the error on the number of implanted ions used to generate a single optically active silicon vacancy (SiV) defect in diamond compared to timed implantation. Additionally, through post-implantation analysis, we can…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiamond and Carbon-based Materials Research · Electronic and Structural Properties of Oxides · Integrated Circuits and Semiconductor Failure Analysis
