posted on 2018-05-07, 00:00authored bySiddharth Dhomkar, Harishankar Jayakumar, Pablo R. Zangara, Carlos A. Meriles
Although the spin
properties of superficial shallow nitrogen-vacancy
(NV) centers have been the subject of extensive scrutiny, considerably
less attention has been devoted to studying the dynamics of NV charge
conversion near the diamond surface. Using multicolor confocal microscopy,
here we show that near-surface point defects arising from high-density
ion implantation dramatically increase the ionization and recombination
rates of shallow NVs compared to those in bulk diamond. Further, we
find that these rates grow linearly, not quadratically, with laser
intensity, indicative of single-photon processes enabled by NV state
mixing with other defect states. Accompanying these findings, we observe
NV ionization and recombination in the dark, likely the result of
charge transfer to neighboring traps. Despite the altered charge dynamics,
we show that one can imprint rewritable, long-lasting patterns of
charged-initialized, near-surface NVs over large areas, an ability
that could be exploited for electrochemical biosensing or to optically
store digital data sets with subdiffraction resolution.