Nuclear spin polarization in silicon carbide at room temperature in the Earth's magnetic field
A. N. Anisimov, A. V. Poshakinskiy, G. V. Astakhov

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates efficient room-temperature nuclear spin polarization in silicon carbide using optical and RF techniques in Earth's magnetic field, advancing quantum information and imaging applications.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method for hyperpolarizing nuclear spins in SiC at ambient conditions using ODMR and RF, with theoretical and experimental validation.
Findings
Nuclear spins in SiC can be polarized at room temperature in Earth's magnetic field.
The method achieves ultra-deep cooling of nuclear spins to about 50 nK.
The approach enables control of nuclear spins under ambient conditions.
Abstract
Coupled electron-nuclear spins represent a promising quantum system, where the optically induced electron spin polarization can be dynamically transferred to nuclear spins via the hyperfine interaction. Most experiments on dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) are performed at cryogenic temperatures and/or in moderate external magnetic fields, the latter approach being very sensitive to the magnetic field orientation. Here, we demonstrate that the Si nuclear spins in SiC can be efficiently polarized at room temperature even in the Earth's magnetic field. We exploit the asymmetric splitting of the optically detected magnetic resonance (ODMR) lines inherent to half-integer electron spins, such that the certain transitions involving Si nuclei can be clearly separated and selectively addressed using radiofrequency (RF) fields. As a model system, we use the V3 silicon…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElectromagnetic Effects on Materials · Crystallography and Radiation Phenomena · Semiconductor materials and interfaces
