This report is a follow-up to the previous report on the difference between high fluence, high and low flux irradiations. There was a discrepancy in the data for the LBNL irradiated S5821 PIN diodes. There were diodes irradiated in the two batches (high and low flux) with the same flux and fluence for reference (lell ions/cm2/shot and 5, 10, and 20 ions/cm2 total flux). Although these diodes should have the same electrical characteristics their leakage currents were different by a factor of 5-6 (batch 2 was larger). Also, the C-V measurements showed drastically different results. It was speculated that these discrepancies were due to one of the following two reasons: 1. Different times elapsed between radiation and characterization. 2. Different areas were irradiated (roughly half of the diodes were covered during irradiation). To address the first concern, we annealed the devices according to the ASTM standard [1]. The differences remained the same. To determine the irradiated area, we performed large area IBIC scans on several devices. Error! Reference source not found. below shows the IBIC maps of two devices one from each batch. The irradiated areas are approximately the same.
Meesala, Srujan; Sohn, Young I.; Pingault, Benjamin; Shao, Linbo; Atikian, Haig A.; Holzgrafe, Jeffrey; Gündoǧan, Mustafa; Stavrakas, Camille; Sipahigil, Alp; Chia, Cleaven; Evans, Ruffin; Burek, Michael J.; Zhang, Mian; Wu, Lue; Pacheco, Jose L.; Abraham, John; Bielejec, Edward S.; Lukin, Mikhail D.; Atatüre, Mete; Lončar, Marko
We control the electronic structure of the silicon-vacancy (SiV) color-center in diamond by changing its static strain environment with a nano-electro-mechanical system. This allows deterministic and local tuning of SiV optical and spin transition frequencies over a wide range, an essential step towards multiqubit networks. In the process, we infer the strain Hamiltonian of the SiV revealing large strain susceptibilities of order 1 PHz/strain for the electronic orbital states. We identify regimes where the spin-orbit interaction results in a large strain susceptibility of order 100 THz/strain for spin transitions, and propose an experiment where the SiV spin is strongly coupled to a nanomechanical resonator.
As device dimensions decrease, single displacement effects become more important. We measured the gain degradation in III-V heterojunction bipolar transistors due to single particles using a heavy ion microbeam. Two devices with different sizes were irradiated with various ion species ranging from oxygen to gold to study the effect of the irradiation ion mass on gain change. From the single steps in the inverse gain (which is proportional to the number of defects), we calculated cumulative distribution functions to help determine design margins. The displacement process was modeled using the MARLOWE binary collision approximation code. The entire structure of the device was modeled and the defects in the base-emitter junction were counted to be compared with the experimental results. While we found good agreement for the large device, we had to modify our model to reach reasonable agreement for the small device.
Burek, Michael J.; Meuwly, Charles; Evans, Ruffin E.; Bhaskar, Mihir K.; Sipahigil, Alp; Meesala, Srujan; MacHielse, Bartholomeus; Sukachev, Denis D.; Nguyen, Christian T.; Pacheco, Jose L.; Bielejec, Edward S.; Lukin, Mikhail D.; Lončar, Marko
Color centers in diamond provide a promising platform for quantum optics in the solid state, with coherent optical transitions and long-lived electron and nuclear spins. Building upon recent demonstrations of nanophotonic waveguides and optical cavities in single-crystal diamond, we now demonstrate on-chip diamond nanophotonics with a high-efficiency fiber-optical interface achieving >90% power coupling at visible wavelengths. We use this approach to demonstrate a bright source of narrow-band single photons based on a silicon-vacancy color center embedded within a waveguide-coupled diamond photonic crystal cavity. Our fiber-coupled diamond quantum nanophotonic interface results in a high flux (approximately 38 kHz) of coherent single photons (near Fourier limited at <1-GHz bandwidth) into a single-mode fiber, enabling possibilities for realizing quantum networks that interface multiple emitters, both on chip and separated by long distances.