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We discovered uniaxial oriented centers in silicon carbide having unusual performance. Here we demonstrate that the family of silicon-vacancy related centers with $S= 3/2$ in rhombic 15R-SiC crystalline matrix possess unique characteristics such as ODMR contrast and optical spin alignment existing at temperatures up to 250$^circ$C. Thus the concept of optically addressable silicon vacancy related centers with half integer ground spin state is extended to the wide class of SiC rhombic polytypes. The structure of these centers, which is a fundamental problem for quantum applications, has been established using high frequency ENDOR. It has been shown that a family of siliconvacancy related centers is a negatively charged silicon vacancy in the paramagnetic state with the spin $S= 3/2$, V$_textrm{Si}^-$, perturbed by neutral carbon vacancy in non-paramagnetic state, V$_textrm{C}^0$, having no covalent bond with the silicon vacancy and located adjacently to the silicon vacancy on the c crystal axis.
High-frequency pulse electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) were used to clarify the electronic structure of the color centers with an optically induced high-temperature spin-3/2 alignment in hexagonal 4H-
We uncover the fine structure of a silicon vacancy in isotopically purified silicon carbide (4H-$^{28}$SiC) and find extra terms in the spin Hamiltonian, originated from the trigonal pyramidal symmetry of this spin-3/2 color center. These terms give
Optically interfaced spins in the solid promise scalable quantum networks. Robust and reliable optical properties have so far been restricted to systems with inversion symmetry. Here, we release this stringent constraint by demonstrating outstanding
Nanodiamonds containing color centers open up many applications in quantum information processing, metrology, and quantum sensing. In particular, silicon vacancy (SiV) centers are prominent candidates as quantum emitters due to their beneficial optic
Silicon Carbide is a promising host material for spin defect based quantum sensors owing to its commercial availability and established techniques for electrical and optical microfabricated device integration. The negatively charged silicon vacancy i