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Single V2 defect in 4H silicon carbide Schottky diode at low temperature

Author

Listed:
  • Timo Steidl

    (University of Stuttgart)

  • Pierre Kuna

    (University of Stuttgart)

  • Erik Hesselmeier-Hüttmann

    (University of Stuttgart)

  • Di Liu

    (University of Stuttgart
    Harvard University)

  • Rainer Stöhr

    (University of Stuttgart)

  • Wolfgang Knolle

    (Leibniz-Institute of Surface Engineering (IOM))

  • Misagh Ghezellou

    (Linköping University)

  • Jawad Ul-Hassan

    (Linköping University)

  • Maximilian Schober

    (Johannes Kepler University Linz)

  • Michel Bockstedte

    (Johannes Kepler University Linz)

  • Guodong Bian

    (HUN-REN Wigner Research Centre
    Budapest University of Technology and Economics
    MTA-WFK Lendület -Momentum- Semiconductor Nanostructres Research Group)

  • Adam Gali

    (HUN-REN Wigner Research Centre
    Budapest University of Technology and Economics
    MTA-WFK Lendület -Momentum- Semiconductor Nanostructres Research Group)

  • Vadim Vorobyov

    (University of Stuttgart)

  • Jörg Wrachtrup

    (University of Stuttgart
    Max Planck Institute of Solid State Research)

Abstract

Nanoelectrical and photonic integration of quantum optical components is crucial for scalable solid-state quantum technologies. Silicon carbide stands out as a material with mature quantum defects and a wide variety of applications in semiconductor industry. Here, we study the behaviour of single silicon vacancy (V2) colour centres in a metal-semiconductor (Au/Ti/4H-SiC) epitaxial wafer device, operating in a Schottky diode configuration. We explore the depletion of free carriers in the vicinity of the defect, as well as electrical tuning of the defect optical transition lines. By detecting single charge traps, we investigate their impact on V2 optical line width. Additionally, we investigate the charge-photon-dynamics of the V2 centre and find its dominating photon-ionisation processes characteristic rate and wavelength dependence. Finally, we probe the spin coherence properties of the V2 system in the junction and demonstrate several key protocols for quantum network applications. Our work shows the first demonstration of low temperature integration of a Schottky device with optical microstructures for quantum applications and paves the way towards fundamentally scalable and reproducible optical spin defect centres in solids.

Suggested Citation

  • Timo Steidl & Pierre Kuna & Erik Hesselmeier-Hüttmann & Di Liu & Rainer Stöhr & Wolfgang Knolle & Misagh Ghezellou & Jawad Ul-Hassan & Maximilian Schober & Michel Bockstedte & Guodong Bian & Adam Gali, 2025. "Single V2 defect in 4H silicon carbide Schottky diode at low temperature," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-7, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-59647-9
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-59647-9
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