Toward Nanoscale Magnetometry of Van der Waals Heterostructures using Nitrogen-Vacancy Centers in Diamond

POSTER

Abstract

Two-dimensional layered heterostructures remain at the forefront of materials research and are promising candidates from the perspective of both fundamental science and technological advancement. They can exhibit a rich array of magnetic phenomena, with recent experiments in transition metal dichalcogenides (TMD) demonstrating long-lived spin relaxation and coherence times. We present first steps toward a wide-field confocal microscope aimed at probing the exciton and defect-based magnetism of such materials. By observing the quenching of fluorescence from single Nitrogen-Vacancy centers of predetermined depths, we measure the transition dipole moment of the TMD and characterize this as a function of layer number. We also describe recent progress toward the imaging of magnetic defects and evaluate the feasibility of using this scheme to probe coupled spin and valley dynamics.~

Authors

  • Thomas Mittiga

    • Univ of California - Berkeley
  • Satcher Hsieh

    • Department of Physics, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA
    • Univ of California - Berkeley
  • Chong Zu

    • Univ of California - Berkeley
  • Chenhao Jin

    • Univ of California - Berkeley
  • Jonghwan Kim

    • Univ of California - Berkeley
  • Bryce Kobrin

    • Univ of California - Berkeley
  • Feng Wang

    • Univ of California - Berkeley
  • Norman Yao

    • Univ of California - Berkeley
    • University of California -- Berkeley
    • University of California - Berkeley
    • UC Berkeley