B.D. Terris, H.J. Mamin, et al.
Optoelectronics - Devices and Technologies
We investigate the effect of two different surface treatments on shallow nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in diamond. Short duration oxygen plasma exposure is found to damage near-surface NV centers, resulting in their disappearance in fluorescence images. Subsequent annealing creates large numbers of new NV centers, attributed to plasma-induced vacancy creation. By tracking individual NV centers during thermal oxidation, we show that oxidation at 550 °C results in modest improvement of spin coherence. Higher temperature oxidations correlate with gradual decline in spin coherence and eventual instability of NV centers before ultimate disappearance. This is indicative of a reduction of the NV-to-surface distance due to oxidative etching. Thermal oxidation can offer controlled access to near-surface NV spins at the nanometer scale, an important requirement for many applications of NV-based nanomagnetometry. © 2014 AIP Publishing LLC.
B.D. Terris, H.J. Mamin, et al.
Optoelectronics - Devices and Technologies
G.C. Hill, J.I. Padovani, et al.
JMM
H.J. Mamin, M.H. Sherwood, et al.
Physical Review Letters
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Nature Communications