Efficient Dynamic Polarization of Phosphorus Nuclei in Silicon in Strong Magnetic Fields and Low Temperatures
cond-mat.mes-hall
/ Authors
J. Järvinen, D. Zvezdov, J. Ahokas, S. Sheludyakov, O. Vainio, L. Lehtonen, S. Vasiliev, Y. Fujii, S. Mitsudo, T. Mizusaki
and 4 more authors
/ Abstract
We demonstrate that the dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) of phosphorus donors in silicon can be very effective in a magnetic field of 4.6 T and at temperatures below 1 K. The DNP occurs due to the Overhauser effect following a cross relaxation via the forbidden flip-flop or flip-flip transitions. Nuclear polarization values $P>0.98$ were reached after 20 min of pumping with 0.4 $μ$W of microwave power. We evaluated that the ratio of hyperfine state populations increased by three orders of magnitude after 2 hours of pumping, and an extremely pure nuclear spin system containing $<10^{-11}$ of the other spin state can be created. An inverted DNP has been obtained by pumping the low field ESR line of P followed by the flip-flip cross relaxation. This transition has much smaller relaxation rate and required substantially longer pumping times. We found that the nuclear polarization dynamics deviates substantially from a simple exponential function. The evolution of the polarization is characterized by two time constants $T^{'}_{ac}\approx$15 s in the beginning, and $T^{"}_{ac}\approx$1100 s for long pumping time. Temperature dependence of the nuclear relaxation rate of $^{31}$P was studied down to 0.75 K, below which the relaxation time became too long to be measured. The nuclear polarization followed a bi-exponential time dependence during relaxation. We suggest that the non-exponential behavior of DNP dynamics and the subsequent relaxation is mediated by the nuclei of $^{29}$Si surrounding $^{31}$P donors, which affect the transition probabilities of the forbidden cross-relaxation processes.