Detection and Manipulation of Single NV Centers in Diamond

ORAL

Abstract

We use a scanning confocal microscope to investigate the fluorescence emission from nitrogen vacancy (NV) centers in diamond, a promising building block for quantum computing due to its long coherence time at room temperature. We demonstrate detection and coherent manipulation of a single NV center spin in synthetic diamond. Rabi oscillation data shows a modulation in the amplitude that is accounted for by simulating NV center spin dynamics in the presence of a proximal $^{14}$N nuclear spin. The hyperfine interaction opens up the possibility of coupling the electronic spin of an NV center to nearby nuclear spins, forming multi-qubit systems for quantum computation. For applications where a long coherence time is necessary, decoherence caused by the hyperfine interaction can be suppressed using a spin-echo pulse sequence, resulting in electron spin coherence times of over 1 $\mu$s at room temperature in type Ib diamond of high impurity content.

*Research supported by the Sloan and Packard Foundations and the National Science Foundation through the Princeton Center for Complex Materials.

Authors

  • S. Sangtawesin

    • Department of Physics, Princeton University
  • T.O. Brundage

    • Department of Physics, Princeton University
  • S.A. Perlman

    • Department of Physics, Princeton University
  • J.R. Petta

    • Department of Physics, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA
    • Princeton University
    • Department of Physics, Princeton University