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Detecting External Electron Spins Using Nitrogen-Vacancy Centers

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arxiv 1209.3748 v1 pith:6G57PGOG submitted 2012-09-17 cond-mat.mes-hall

Detecting External Electron Spins Using Nitrogen-Vacancy Centers

classification cond-mat.mes-hall
keywords spinsspincenterscorrelationdiamondexternalsignaltime
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Near-surface nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers have been created in diamond through low energy implantation of 15N to sense electron spins that are external to the diamond. By performing double resonance experiments, we have verified the presence of g=2 spins on a diamond crystal that was subjected to various surface treatments, including coating with a polymer film containing the free radical 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH). Subsequent acid cleaning eliminated the spin signal without otherwise disrupting the NV center, providing strong evidence that the spins were at the surface. A clear correlation was observed between the size of the detected spin signal and the relaxation time T2 for the six NV centers studied. We have developed a model that takes into account the finite correlation time of the fluctuating magnetic fields generated by the external spins, and used it to infer the signal strength and correlation time of the magnetic fields from these spins. This model also highlights the sensitivity advantage of active manipulation of the longitudinal spin component via double resonance over passive detection schemes that measure the transverse component of spin.

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