Multidimensional Coherent Spectroscopy: Probing the Strain Tensor in Diamond and the Effects of Correlated Dephasing
Bates, Kelsey
2024
Abstract
This work covers two main results united by multidimensional coherent spectroscopy (MDCS): one experimental and one theoretical. MDCS is a nonlinear optical technique in which a sample is probed using a series of ultrashort pulses. Measurements are made while varying the relative time delays between the pulses, and the resulting spectra yield a much richer set of information compared to traditional linear spectroscopies. The experimental work concerns the negatively charged silicon-vacancy (SiV) center in diamond. We use two-pulse correlation (TPC) spectroscopy and rephasing MDCS to probe a diamond sample with a high density of implanted SiV centers. These spectra reveal a large number of spectral peaks, which can be grouped into two families of SiV centers using the MDCS spectra. By comparing spectra from two polarizations of the incident light, we associate the two families with two orientation groups within the diamond. We link the differences in the frequencies of the spectral peaks to strain intrinsic to our sample, and use the peak locations from both families to solve for the full strain tensor local to the laser spot. By measuring TPC spectra at multiple points on the sample, we track changes in the measured strain. We observe non-zero strain on the order or 1e-5 at every measured location, and observe variation in both the normal and shear strain in the sample. We interpret the strain as likely to be due to the high implantation density of silicon in the diamond. These results could be useful when using SiV centers as a strain gauge. The theoretical work uses simulations to calculate spectra. The simulations developed here begin by recursively generating a list of Feynman diagrams for a given signal pathway and system. The contributions due to each Feynman diagram are calculated and combined to find the complete spectrum. The code is designed to be very flexible, and can be used to simulate arbitrary types of MDCS spectra and energy level diagrams. We then apply the simulations to investigate the effects of correlated dephasing due to scattering events in the Markovian limit on MDCS of interacting systems. We derive a mathematical expression to represent the dephasing rate of a coherence in terms of the dephasing rates of the coherences from the constituent energy transitions and the correlation matrix of these transitions. This expression is applied to simulate double-quantum and higher-order n-quantum spectra of multiple interacting systems. For double-quantum spectra, correlated dephasing results in a higher double-quantum dephasing rate, and anticorrelated dephasing results in a lower double-quantum dephasing rate. Similar results are found for the n-quantum dephasing rate. Generally, for certain configurations, the many-body dephasing rate can be arbitrarily low, and the n-quantum linewidth can be arbitrarily narrow, although this requires some form of anticorrelation. These results could be useful in creating quantum sensors with higher sensitivities, since one limit of the sensitivity is the decoherence time of the system.Deep Blue DOI
Subjects
Multidimensional Coherent Spectroscopy Ultrafast Optics Silicon Vacancy Center Strain Correlated Dephasing of Interacting Systems
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