Probing negative differential resistance in silicon with a P-I-N diode-integrated T center ensemble

Abstract

Solid-state defect quantum systems are exquisite probes of their local charge environment. Nonlinear dynamical electric fields in solids are challenging to characterize directly, conventionally limited to coarse macroscopic methods which fail to capture subtle effects in the material. Here, through transient optical spectroscopy on an embedded T center ensemble, we realize the in-situ observation of a silicon PIN-diode phase transition to a regime of self-sustained carrier oscillatory dynamics characteristic of negative differential resistance. Manifest in both the ensemble electroluminescence and photoluminescence, we find a temperature and field-dependent phase space for persistent undamped amplitude oscillations indicative of a collective ensemble response to the field dynamics. These findings shed new light on the cryogenic behavior of silicon, provide fundamental insight into the physics of the T center for improved quantum device performance, and open a promising new direction for defect-based local quantum sensing in semiconductor devices.

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