Characterization of oxygen defects in diamond by means of density functional theory calculations

Gergő Thiering and Adam Gali
Phys. Rev. B 94, 125202 – Published 9 September 2016

Abstract

Point defects in diamond are of high interest as candidates for realizing solid state quantum bits, bioimaging agents, or ultrasensitive electric or magnetic field sensors. Various artificial diamond synthesis methods should introduce oxygen contamination in diamond, however, the incorporation of oxygen into diamond crystal and the nature of oxygen-related point defects are largely unknown. Oxygen may be potentially interesting as a source of quantum bits or it may interact with other point defects which are well established solid state qubits. Here we employ plane-wave supercell calculations within density functional theory, in order to characterize the electronic and magneto-optical properties of various oxygen-related defects. Besides the trivial single interstitial and substitutional oxygen defects we also consider their complexes with vacancies and hydrogen atoms. We find that oxygen defects are mostly electrically active and introduce highly correlated orbitals that pose a challenge for density functional theory modeling. Nevertheless, we are able to identify the fingerprints of substitutional oxygen defect, the oxygen-vacancy and oxygen-vacancy-hydrogen complexes in the electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum. We demonstrate that first principles calculations can predict the motional averaging of the electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum of defects that are subject to Jahn-Teller distortion. We show that the high-spin neutral oxygen-vacancy defect exhibits very fast nonradiative decay from its optical excited state that might hinder applying it as a qubit.

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  • Received 14 June 2016
  • Revised 13 August 2016

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.94.125202

©2016 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Gergő Thiering and Adam Gali

  • Wigner Research Center for Physics and Optics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, P.O. Box 49, H-1525 Budapest, Hungary and Department of Atomic Physics, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Budafokiút 8, H-1111 Budapest, Hungary

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Issue

Vol. 94, Iss. 12 — 15 September 2016

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