Abstract

The recently demonstrated electroluminescence of color centers in diamond makes them one of the best candidates for room temperature single-photon sources. However, the reported emission rates are far off what can be achieved by state-of-the-art electrically driven epitaxial quantum dots. Since the electroluminescence mechanism has not yet been elucidated, it is not clear to what extent the emission rate can be increased. Here we develop a theoretical framework to study single-photon emission from color centers in diamond under electrical pumping. The proposed model comprises electron and hole trapping and releasing, transitions between the ground and excited states of the color center as well as structural transformations of the center due to carrier trapping. It provides the possibility to predict both the photon emission rate and the wavelength of emitted photons. Self-consistent numerical simulations of the single-photon emitting diode based on the proposed model show that the photon emission rate can be as high as 100 kcounts s−1 at standard conditions. In contrast to most optoelectronic devices, the emission rate steadily increases with the device temperature achieving of more than 100 Mcount s−1 at 500 K, which is highly advantageous for practical applications. These results demonstrate the potential of color centers in diamond as electrically driven non-classical light emitters and provide a foundation for the design and development of single-photon sources for optical quantum computation and quantum communication networks operating at room and higher temperatures.

Highlights

  • Operation at the single‐photon level promises the ultimate energy efficiency for optical and optoelectronic devices and opens new prospects for various applications, such as secure optical communications based on quantum cryptography [1] and quantum computers [2]

  • Single-photon sources operating upon electrical injection are vitally important [3,4,5], since they are characterized by higher energy efficiency and better integration compatibility compared to optically pumped devices

  • Using a comprehensive computational approach, we study electroluminescence of a single color center embedded in a p-n junction diamond diode in a wide temperature range and demonstrate that, in contrast to most semiconductor and solid-state devices, the diamond single-photon emitting diode exhibits superior emission properties at high temperatures with emission rates exceeding 108 counts per second

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Summary

Introduction

Operation at the single‐photon level promises the ultimate energy efficiency for optical and optoelectronic devices and opens new prospects for various applications, such as secure optical communications based on quantum cryptography [1] and quantum computers [2]. Without the theoretical description of electrically pumped color centers in diamond, it is not clear to what extent the photon emission rate can be increased.

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