The nitrogen-vacancy (NV) colour centre in diamond is an important physical system for emergent quantum technologies, including quantum metrology, information processing and communications, as well as for various nanotechnologies, such as biological and sub-diffraction limit imaging, and for tests of entanglement in quantum mechanics. Given this array of existing and potential applications and the almost 50 years of NV research, one would expect that the physics of the centre is well understood, however, the study of the NV centre has proved challenging, with many early assertions now believed false and many remaining issues yet to be resolved. This review represents the first time that the key empirical and ab initio results have been extracted from the extensive NV literature and assembled into one consistent picture of the current understanding of the centre. As a result, the key unresolved issues concerning the NV centre are identified and the possible avenues for their resolution are examined.Comment: Review article, 101 pages, 31 figures, and 18 table
The ability to sensitively detect individual charges under ambient conditions would benefit a wide range of applications across disciplines. However, most current techniques are limited to low-temperature methods such as single-electron transistors 1,2 , single-electron electrostatic force microscopy 3 and scanning tunnelling microscopy 4 . Here we introduce a quantum-metrology technique demonstrating precision three-dimensional electric-field measurement using a single nitrogen-vacancy defect centre spin in diamond. An a.c. electric-field sensitivity reaching 202 ± 6 V cm −1 Hz −1/2 has been achieved. This corresponds to the electric field produced by a single elementary charge located at a distance of ∼150 nm from our spin sensor with averaging for one second. The analysis of the electronic structure of the defect centre reveals how an applied magnetic field influences the electric-field-sensing properties. We also demonstrate that diamond-defect-centre spins can be switched between electric-and magnetic-field sensing modes and identify suitable parameter ranges for both detector schemes. By combining magnetic-and electric-field sensitivity, nanoscale detection and ambient operation, our study should open up new frontiers in imaging and sensing applications ranging from materials science to bioimaging.Sensitive imaging or detection of charges is an outstanding task in a variety of applications. The development, for example, of single-electron transistors (SET; ref. 5) has pushed charge sensing to an unprecedented sensitivity of 10 −6 electron charge, and is being used in low-temperature detection and scanning applications 2 , and in sensors in quantum devices 6 . Inspired by the development of tunnelling microscopy a variety of scanning probes have been devised to measure surface electrical properties, such as scanning capacitance microscopy (SCM; ref. 7), scanning Kelvin probe (ref. 8) and electric field-sensitive atomic force microscopy (EFM; ref. 9). Indeed, the last method has shown the remarkable ability to detect the presence of individual charges 3 .We report on a fundamentally new method that uses the spin of single defect centres in diamond to sense electric-field-dependent shifts in energy levels. Sensitive electric-field detection is based on the remarkable properties of the NV centre 10 . The most notable of these are: the detection of fluorescence from single defects to provide an atom-sized local probe 11 , outstandingly long spin dephasing times 12 , as well as the controlled positioning of single centres 13,14 . These properties have led to a variety of applications of the NV centre, ranging from quantum science 15 and precision magnetic-field sensing [16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24] to biolabelling 25,26 . It is the aim of the present work to explore the interplay between the Zeeman shift, local strain effects and the Stark shift of the ground state spin manifold and use the improved understanding of this interplay for the sensing of electric fields. We will show that the decoupling of the...
The negatively charged nitrogen-vacancy (NV-) center in diamond has realized new frontiers in quantum technology. Here, the optical and spin resonances of the NV- center are observed under hydrostatic pressures up to 60 GPa. Our results motivate powerful new techniques to measure pressure and image high-pressure magnetic and electric phenomena. Additionally, molecular orbital analysis and semiclassical calculations provide insight into the effects of compression on the electronic orbitals of the NV- center.
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