Local nanoscale probing of electron spins using NV centers in diamond
Sergei Trofimov, Christos Thessalonikios, Victor Deinhart, Alexander Spyrantis, Lucas Tsunaki, Kseniia Volkova, Katja H\"oflich, Boris Naydenov

TL;DR
This study demonstrates nanoscale measurement of local nitrogen and defect concentrations in diamond using NV centers and DEER spectroscopy, enhancing understanding of quantum sensor environments.
Contribution
It introduces a method to quantify local nitrogen and defect concentrations at the nanoscale in diamond using NV centers fabricated with a helium ion microscope.
Findings
Achieved measurement of nitrogen concentration at 230 ppb using DEER.
Determined concentrations of other paramagnetic defects up to 15 ppb.
Validated the approach by comparing spectra with numerical simulations.
Abstract
Substitutional nitrogen atoms in a diamond crystal (P1 centers) are, on one hand, a resource for creation of nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers, that have been widely employed as nanoscale quantum sensors. On the other hand, P1's electron spin is a source of paramagnetic noise that degrades the NV's performance by shortening its coherence time. Accurate quantification of nitrogen concentration is therefore essential for optimizing diamond-based quantum devices. However, bulk characterization methods based on optical absorption or electron paramagnetic resonance often overlook local variations in nitrogen content. In this work, we use a helium ion microscope to fabricate nanoscale NV center ensembles at predefined sites in a diamond crystal containing low concentrations of nitrogen. We then utilize these NV-based probes to measure the local nitrogen concentration on the level of 230 ppb…
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