Transform-Limited Photons from a Coherent Tin-Vacancy Spin in Diamond

Matthew E. Trusheim*, Benjamin Pingault, Noel H. Wan, Mustafa Gündoǧan, Lorenzo De Santis, Romain Debroux, Dorian Gangloff, Carola Purser, Kevin C. Chen, Michael Walsh, Joshua J. Rose, Jonas N. Becker, Benjamin Lienhard, Eric Bersin, Ioannis Paradeisanos, Gang Wang, Dominika Lyzwa, Alejandro R.P. Montblanch, Girish Malladi, Hassaram BakhruAndrea C. Ferrari, Ian A. Walmsley, Mete Atatüre, Dirk Englund

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

148 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Solid-state quantum emitters that couple coherent optical transitions to long-lived spin qubits are essential for quantum networks. Here we report on the spin and optical properties of individual tin-vacancy (SnV) centers in diamond nanostructures. Through cryogenic magneto-optical and spin spectroscopy, we verify the inversion-symmetric electronic structure of the SnV, identify spin-conserving and spin-flipping transitions, characterize transition linewidths, measure electron spin lifetimes, and evaluate the spin dephasing time. We find that the optical transitions are consistent with the radiative lifetime limit even in nanofabricated structures. The spin lifetime is phonon limited with an exponential temperature scaling leading to T1>10 ms, and the coherence time, T2∗ reaches the nuclear spin-bath limit upon cooling to 2.9 K. These spin properties exceed those of other inversion-symmetric color centers for which similar values require millikelvin temperatures. With a combination of coherent optical transitions and long spin coherence without dilution refrigeration, the SnV is a promising candidate for feasable and scalable quantum networking applications.

Original languageEnglish
Article number023602
JournalPhysical Review Letters
Volume124
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 14 Jan 2020
Externally publishedYes

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