School of Physics - Theses

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    Developing and applying quantum sensors based on optically addressable spin defects
    Healey, Alexander Joseph ( 2023-04)
    Quantum sensing aims to further our understanding of the natural world and support an upcoming technological revolution by exploiting quantum properties or systems to exceed the performance of classical sensing. Owing to their convenient modes of operation and strong room temperature quantum properties, optically active spin defects hosted within solid state materials have come to prominence as one of the foremost tools of choice in this landscape. Many applications now aim to leverage dense ensembles of such defects to boost measurement sensitivity or scale up, which places greater emphasis on the quality of the host material and sensor production methods since cherry-picking individual defects is no longer an option. The prototypical example of such a defect is the nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centre in diamond, which exhibits remarkable room temperature spin coherence, bestowed upon it by diamond's material properties. In this thesis, we first look at optimising the production of NV ensembles for quantum sensing, aiming to efficiently and cost-effectively produce sensors capable of performing high sensitivity measurements in two key regimes that will be central to the experimental applications explored later. The topics examined are hyperpolarisation of a nuclear spin ensemble on the diamond surface through coupling to an ultra-near-surface NV layer, and investigating the properties of a van der Waals antiferromagnet through widefield NV microscopy. The demands placed on the NV layer for these applications are diverse from one another, with charge stability and quantum coherence properties being vital for the former, and the ability to scalably and reproducibly create layers of known thickness crucial to the latter. In light of these studies, we finally consider whether a different spin system housed within an entirely separate materials system, the boron-vacancy defect in hexagonal boron nitride, may be a suitable alternative to the well-established NV diamond system. We find that the distinct properties of the new host material provide both advantages and disadvantages compared to diamond, and that this system could allow quantum sensing to find even broader scope in the future. By investigating the link between host material properties and the suitability of a quantum sensor for given applications, this thesis provides a unique perspective on the future of the field, which will likely demand more highly specialised and varied sensors.
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    The theory of the nitrogen-vacancy colour centre in diamond
    Doherty, Marcus William ( 2012)
    The nitrogen-vacancy (NV) colour centre in diamond is a model system for many quantum technologies including, metrology, information processing and communications. The NV centre is also highly suitable for employment in various nanotechnology applications, such as biological and sub-diffraction limit imaging, and in tests of fundamental physics, such as cavity quantum electrodynamics and the quantum entanglement of mesoscopic systems. The remarkable properties of the centre are however, not currently fully understood, with several unresolved issues limiting the performance of the centre in its many important applications. As the unresolved issues are interrelated and concern different aspects of the centre's properties, they may only be resolved by the development of a single self-consistent theory of the NV centre. The aim of this work has been to develop such a theory. The theory has been developed using a combination of the molecular model of deep level defects in semiconductors, group theoretical methods and ab initio calculations. The highly structured nature of the theory will enable its future use in the systematic identification of other colour centres that possess properties that exceed those of the NV centre.