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Probing spin-phonon interaction of boron-vacancy centers in hexagonal boron nitride

ORAL

Abstract

The negatively charged boron-vacancy center (VB-) in hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) has recently emerged as a highly promising quantum sensor due to its ability to integrate with heterogeneous devices. Compared to the nitrogen-vacancy (NV) center in diamond, the temperature dependence of the spin transition energy of VB- is more than an order of magnitude greater, but the underlying mechanism has not been fully understood. We first use isotopically purified h10B15N to systematically characterize the zero-field splitting, hyperfine interaction, and spin relaxation time of VB- from 10 to 350 K. Our first-principle calculations of the VB- spin-phonon interaction show good agreement with experimental data. We found that a second-order effect from finite-temperature phonon excitations is the main contributor to the observed behavior. These temperature-dependent properties allow VB- to detect local phonon modes of its host and neighboring materials in heterogeneous devices, enabling a novel sensing modality that is unique to quantum sensors in 2D materials.

Publication: https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.15493

Presenters

  • Ruotian Gong

    Washington University in St. Louis

Authors

  • Ruotian Gong

    Washington University in St. Louis

  • Zhongyuan Liu

    Washington University in St. Louis

  • Benchen Huang

    University of Chicago

  • Yu Jin

    University of Chicago

  • Xinyi Du

    Washington University, St. Louis

  • Guanghui He

    Washington University, St. Louis, Washington University in St. Louis

  • Thomas Poirier

    Kansas State University

  • Ariana Lerena Riofrio

    Santa Clara University

  • Li Yang

    Washington University, St. Louis

  • Erik Henriksen

    Washington University, St. Louis

  • James H Edgar

    Tim Taylor Department of Chemical Engineering, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506, United States, Kansas State University

  • Giulia Galli

    University of Chicago

  • Chong Zu

    Washington University, St. Louis