Electron Spin Resonance of P Donors in Isotopically Purified Si Detected by Contactless Photoconductivity
Abstract
Coherence times of electron spins bound to phosphorus donors have been measured, using a standard Hahn echo technique, to be up to 20 ms in isotopically pure silicon with [P] = 1014 cm-3 and at temperatures ≤ 4 K. Although such times are exceptionally long for electron spins in the solid state, they are nevertheless limited by donor electron spin-spin interactions. Suppressing such interactions requires even lower donor concentrations, which lie below the detection limit for typical electron spin resonance (ESR) spectrometers. Here we describe an alternative method for phosphorus donor ESR detection, exploiting the spin-to-charge conversion provided by the optical donor bound exciton transition. We characterise the method and its dependence on laser power and use it to measure a coherence time of T2 = 130 ms for one of the purest silicon samples grown to-date ([P] = 5× 1011 cm-3). We then benchmark this result using an alternative application of the donor bound exciton transition: optically polarising the donor spins before using conventional ESR detection at 1.7~K for a sample with [P] = 4×1012 cm-3, and measuring in this case a T2 of 350 ms.
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