Spin pairs in hexagonal boron nitride and their applications

POSTER

Abstract

Optically addressable solid-state spins are an important platform for practical quantum technologies. Van der Waals material hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) is a promising host as it contains a wide variety of optical emitters, but thus far observations of addressable spins have been sparse, and most of them lacked a demonstration of coherent spin control. Here we demonstrate robust optical readout of spin pairs in hBN with emission wavelengths spanning from violet to the near-infrared. We find these broadband spin pairs exist naturally in a variety of hBN samples from bulk crystals to powders to epitaxial films, and can be coherently controlled across the entire wavelength range. Furthermore, we demonstrate these spin pairs are an isotropic spin system and so are insensitive to the direction of applied magnetic fields and can act as an RF-optical transducer. Using this platform, we first demonstrate a single-frequency RF receiver with frequency tunability from 0.1 to 19 GHz. We next demonstrate an instantaneous wideband RF spectrum analyser by applying a magnetic field gradient to encode RF frequency into spatial position. This work exemplifies the unique properties of spin pairs in hBN and their potential applications.

Publication: Violet to near-infrared optical addressing of spin pairs in hexagonal boron nitride - https://arxiv.org/pdf/2409.20186
Radiofrequency receiver based on isotropic solid-state spins - https://arxiv.org/pdf/2410.00430
A universal mechanism for optically addressable solid-state spin pairs - https://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.13148

Presenters

  • Islay O Robertson

    • RMIT University

Authors

  • Islay O Robertson

    • RMIT University
  • Pryia Singh

    • RMIT University
  • Sam C Scholten

    • RMIT University
    • RMIT
  • Alex J Healey

    • RMIT University
    • RMIT
  • Brett C Johnson

    • RMIT University
    • RMIT
  • Giannis Thalassinos

    • RMIT University
  • Kevin J Rietwyk

    • RMIT University
  • Mehran Kianinia

    • University Technology Sydney
  • Igor Aharonovich

    • University Technology Sydney
  • Brant C Gibson

    • RMIT Univeristy
  • Philipp Reineck

    • RMIT University
  • David A Broadway

    • RMIT
  • Jean-Philippe Tetienne

    • RMIT University
    • RMIT
  • Benjamin Whitefield

    • University Technology Sydney
    • University Technology Sydeny