4.8 Article

Ultrabright Room-Temperature Sub-Nanosecond Emission from Single Nitrogen-Vacancy Centers Coupled to Nanopatch Antennas

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 18, Issue 8, Pages 4837-4844

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.8b01415

Keywords

Quantum plasmonics; nitrogen-vacancy centers; single-photon source; nanodiamonds; nanopatch antennas; epitaxial silver

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Sciences and Engineering [DE-SC0017717]
  2. National Science Foundation NSF-OP Grant [DMR-1506775]
  3. Office of Naval Research (ONR) DURIP Grant [N00014-16-1-2767]
  4. DARPA/DSO Extreme Optics and Imaging (EXTREME) Program [HR00111720032]

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Solid-state quantum emitters are in high demand for emerging technologies such as advanced sensing and quantum information processing. Generally, these emitters are not sufficiently bright- for practical applications, and a promising solution consists in coupling them to plasmonic nanostructures. Plasmonic nanostructures support broadband modes, making it possible to speed up the fluorescence emission in room-temperature emitters by several orders of magnitude. However, one has not yet achieved such a fluorescence lifetime shortening without a substantial loss in emission efficiency, largely because of strong absorption in metals and emitter bleaching. Here, we demonstrate ultrabright single-photon emission from photostable nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in nanodiamonds coupled to plasmonic nanocavities made of low-loss single-crystalline silver. We observe a 70-fold difference between the average fluorescence lifetimes and a 90-fold increase in the average detected saturated intensity. The nanocavity-coupled NVs produce up to 35 million photon counts per second, several times more than the previously reported rates from room-temperature quantum emitters.

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