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Photonic crystal cavity-enhanced emission from silicon vacancy centers in polycrystalline diamond achieved without postfabrication fine-tuning

Publication at Faculty of Mathematics and Physics |
2020

Abstract

Diamond optical centers have recently emerged as promising single-photon sources for quantum photonics. Particularly, negatively charged silicon vacancy (SiV-) centers show great promise due to their narrow zero-phonon emission line present also at room temperature.

However, due to fabrication tolerances it is challenging to prepare directly photonic structures with optical modes spectrally matching the emission of SiV(-)centers. To reach the spectral overlap, photonic structures must typically undergo complicated post-processing treatment.

In this work, suspended photonic crystal cavities made of polycrystalline diamond are engineered and more than 2.5-fold enhancement of the SiV(-)center zero-phonon line intensityviacoupling to the cavity photonic mode is demonstrated. The intrinsic non-homogeneous thickness of the diamond thin layer within the sample is taken as an advantage that enables reaching the spectral overlap between the emission from SiV(-)centers and the cavity modes without any post-processing.

Even with lower optical quality compared to monocrystalline diamond, the fabricated photonic structures show comparable efficiency for intensity enhancement. Therefore, the results of this work may open up a promising route for the application of polycrystalline diamond in photonics.