Closed-loop electron-beam-induced spectroscopy and nanofabrication around individual quantum emitters
Author:
Almutlaq Jawaher1ORCID, Kelley Kyle P.2ORCID, Choi Hyeongrak1, Li Linsen1, Lawrie Benjamin3, Dyck Ondrej2, Englund Dirk1, Jesse Stephen2
Affiliation:
1. 2167 Massachusetts Institute of Technology , Cambridge , MA , USA 2. Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences , 518778 Oak Ridge National Laboratory , Oak Ridge , TN , USA 3. Materials Science and Technology Division , 551591 Oak Ridge National Laboratory , Oak Ridge , TN , USA
Abstract
Abstract
Color centers in diamond play a central role in the development of quantum photonic technologies, and their importance is only expected to grow in the near future. For many quantum applications, high collection efficiency from individual emitters is required, but the refractive index mismatch between diamond and air limits the optimal collection efficiency with conventional diamond device geometries. While different out-coupling methods with near-unity efficiency exist, many have yet to be realized due to current limitations in nanofabrication methods, especially for mechanically hard materials like diamond. Here, we leverage electron-beam-induced etching to modify Sn-implanted diamond quantum microchiplets containing integrated waveguides with a width and thickness of 280 nm and 200 nm, respectively. This approach allows for simultaneous high-resolution imaging and modification of the host matrix with an open geometry and direct writing. When coupled with the cathodoluminescence signal generated from the electron–emitter interactions, we can monitor the enhancement of the quantum emitters in real-time with nanoscale spatial resolution. The operando cathodoluminescence measurement and fabrication around single photon emitters demonstrated here provide a new foundation for the potential control of emitter–cavity interactions in integrated quantum photonics.
Funder
U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Materials Sciences and Engineering Division Army Research Office MURI NSF Center for Quantum Networks AFOSR grant The Claude E. Shannon Fellowship The Samsung Scholarship
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
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