We experimentally demonstrate quantum enhanced resolution in confocal fluorescence microscopy exploiting the nonclassical photon statistics of single nitrogen-vacancy color centers in diamond. By developing a general model of superresolution based on the direct sampling of the kth-order autocorrelation function of the photoluminescence signal, we show the possibility to resolve, in principle, arbitrarily close emitting centers. DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.113.143602 PACS numbers: 42.50.-p, 42.30.Va, 42.50.Ar, 42.50.St In the last decade, measurement techniques enhanced by using peculiar properties of quantum light [1,2] have been successfully demonstrated in several remarkable real application scenarios, for example, interferometric measurements aimed to reveal gravitational waves and the quantum gravity effect [3,4], biological particle tracking [5], phase contrast microscopy [6], and imaging [7,8]. Very recently, a novel technique to beat the diffraction limit in microscopy that relies on the antibunching behavior of photons emitted by single fluophores has been proposed [9], and realized in wide field microscopy [10] by using an EMCCD camera.The maximum obtainable imaging resolution in classical far-field fluorescence microscopy, according to the Abbe diffraction limit, is R ≃ 0.61λ=NA, where λ is the wavelength of the light and NA is the numerical aperture of the objective. This restricts the current capability of precisely measuring the position of very small objects such as single photon emitters (color centers, quantum dots, etc.) [11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19], limiting their potential exploitation in the frame quantum technology [20,21]. In general, the research of methods to obtain a microscopy resolution below the diffraction limit is a topic of the utmost interest [22][23][24][25][26][27][28][29] that could provide dramatic improvement in the observation of several systems spanning from quantum dots [30] to living cells [31][32][33][34]. As a notable example, in several entanglement-related experiments using strongly coupled single photon emitters it is of the utmost importance to measure their positions with the highest spatial resolution [35]. In principle, this limitation can be overcome by recently developed microscopy techniques such as stimulated emission depletion (STED) and ground state depletion (GSD) [36,37]. Nevertheless, even if they have been demonstrated effectively able to provide superresolved imaging in many specific applications, among which are color centers in diamond [38], they are characterized by rather specific experimental requirements (dual laser excitation system, availability of luminescence quenching mechanisms by stimulated emission, nontrivial shaping of the quenching beam, high power). Furthermore, these techniques are not suitable in applications in which the fluorescence is not optically induced [39,40], so that new methods are required for those applications.Inspired by the works in [9], in this Letter we develop a comprehensive theory of superresolution ima...
We report on the systematic characterization of conductive micro-channels fabricated in single-crystal diamond with direct ion microbeam writing. Focused high-energy (∼MeV) helium ions are employed to selectively convert diamond with micrometric spatial accuracy to a stable graphitic phase upon thermal annealing, due to the induced structural damage occurring at the end-of-range. A variable-thickness mask allows the accurate modulation of the depth at which the microchannels are formed, from several µm deep up to the very surface of the sample. By means of cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy (TEM), we demonstrate that the technique allows the direct writing of amorphous (and graphitic, upon suitable thermal annealing) microstructures extending within the insulating diamond matrix in the three spatial directions, and in particular, that buried channels embedded in a highly insulating matrix emerge and electrically connect to the sample surface at specific locations. Moreover, by means of electrical characterization at both 2 room temperature and variable temperature, we investigate the conductivity and the charge-transport mechanisms of microchannels obtained by implantation at different ion fluences and after subsequent thermal processes, demonstrating that upon high-temperature annealing, the channels implanted above a critical damage density convert into a stable graphitic phase. These structures have significant impact for different applications, such as compact ionizing radiation detectors, dosimeters, bio-sensors and more generally diamond-based devices with buried three-dimensional all-carbon electrodes.
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