Transition metal ion ensembles in crystals as solid-state coherent spin-photon interfaces: The case of nickel in magnesium oxide

Quantum Physics Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics Atomic Physics (physics.atom-ph) Physics QC1-999 FOS: Physical sciences 530 01 natural sciences Physics - Atomic Physics QA76.75-76.765 0103 physical sciences Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics (cond-mat.mes-hall) Computer software Quantum Physics (quant-ph)
DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2212.14827 Publication Date: 2023-08-30
ABSTRACT
We present general guidelines for finding solid-state systems that could serve as coherent electron spin-photon interfaces even at relatively high temperatures, where phonons are abundant but cooling is easier, and show that transition metal ions in various crystals could comply with these guidelines. As an illustrative example, we focus on divalent nickel ions in magnesium oxide. We perform electron spin resonance spectroscopy and polarization-sensitive magneto-optical fluorescence spectroscopy of a dense ensemble of these ions and find that (i) the ground-state electron spin stays coherent at liquid-helium temperatures for several microseconds, and (ii) there exists energetically well-isolated excited states which can couple to two ground state spin sub-levels via optical transitions of orthogonal polarizations. The latter implies that fast, coherent optical control over the electron spin is possible. We then propose schemes for optical initialization and control of the ground-state electron spin using polarized optical pulses, as well as two schemes for implementing a noise-free, broadband quantum-optical memory at near-telecom wavelengths in this material system.<br/>21 pages, 8 figures. Revised version<br/>
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