Asymmetric Phosphorus Incorporation in Homoepitaxial P-Doped (111) Diamond Revealed by Photoelectron Holography
Author(s) -
T. Yokoya,
Kensei Terashima,
Aya Takeda,
Tetsushi Fukura,
Hirokazu Fujiwara,
Takayuki Muro,
T. Kinoshita,
Hiromitsu Kato,
Satoshi Yamasaki,
Tamio Oguchi,
Takanori Wakita,
Yuji Muraoka,
T. Matsushita
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
nano letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.853
H-Index - 488
eISSN - 1530-6992
pISSN - 1530-6984
DOI - 10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b01481
Subject(s) - dopant , diamond , vacancy defect , doping , material properties of diamond , x ray photoelectron spectroscopy , chemical vapor deposition , crystallography , materials science , chemical physics , chemistry , nanotechnology , condensed matter physics , optoelectronics , nuclear magnetic resonance , physics , metallurgy
Diamond has two crystallographically inequivalent sites in the unit cell. In doped diamond, dopant occupation in the two sites is expected to be equal. Nevertheless, preferential dopant occupation during growth under nonequilibrium conditions is of fundamental importance, for example, to enhance the properties of nitrogen-vacancy (N-V) centers; therefore, this is a promising candidate for a qubit. However, the lack of suitable experimental techniques has made it difficult to study the crystal- and chemical-site-resolved local structures of dopants. Here, we confirm the identity of two chemical sites with asymmetric dopant incorporation in the diamond structure, via the photoelectron holography (PEH) of heavily phosphorus (P)-doped diamond prepared by chemical vapor deposition. One is substitutionally incorporated P with preferential site occupations and the other can be attributed to a PV split vacancy complex with preferential orientation. The present study shows that PEH is a valuable technique to study the local structures around dopants with a resolution of crystallographically inequivalent but energetically equivalent sites/orientations. Such information provides strategies to improve the properties of dopant related-complexes in which alignment is crucial for sensing of magnetic field or quantum spin register using N-V centers in diamond.
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