Theoretical Investigation of Color Centers in Diamond for Quantum Information Science

ORAL

Abstract

Color centers in diamond have emerged as leading solid-state “artificial atoms” for a range of promising technologies from quantum sensing to quantum networks. While properties and limitations of canonical color centers NV- and SiV- have been well documented,exploration and a fundamental understanding of novel color centers presents an exciting opportunity to improve upon the current state of the art. We leverage our unique first-principles methods to detail crucial defect properties in the SnV-, PbV-[1] and SiV0, in addition to novel diamond color centers. We capture the zero phonon line energies and phonon sideband profile and in particular investigate the potential for Jahn-Teller distortion effects in each of these systems, where electron-spin-phonon coupling phenomena are capable of drastically altering predicted spin-orbit splitting and ZPL energies. We detail our unique theoretical approach to the study of these defects, and through our results offer a comprehensive perspective of diamond defects for applications in quantum devices.

[1] Ciccarino, C. et al., submitted (2018)

*All authors acknowledge support from the Army Research Office MURI (Ab-Initio Solid-State Quantum Materials) grant number W911NF-18-1-0431.

Presenters

  • Christopher Ciccarino

    • Harvard University
    • John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University
    • SEAS, Harvard University

Authors

  • Christopher Ciccarino

    • Harvard University
    • John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University
    • SEAS, Harvard University
  • Johannes Flick

    • Harvard University
    • Applied Physics, Harvard University
  • Matthew Trusheim

    • EECS, MIT
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Prineha Narang

    • John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University
    • Harvard University
    • Applied Physics, Harvard University
    • SEAS, Harvard University