12 research outputs found
A robust, scanning quantum system for nanoscale sensing and imaging
Controllable atomic-scale quantum systems hold great potential as sensitive
tools for nanoscale imaging and metrology. Possible applications range from
nanoscale electric and magnetic field sensing to single photon microscopy,
quantum information processing, and bioimaging. At the heart of such schemes is
the ability to scan and accurately position a robust sensor within a few
nanometers of a sample of interest, while preserving the sensor's quantum
coherence and readout fidelity. These combined requirements remain a challenge
for all existing approaches that rely on direct grafting of individual solid
state quantum systems or single molecules onto scanning-probe tips. Here, we
demonstrate the fabrication and room temperature operation of a robust and
isolated atomic-scale quantum sensor for scanning probe microscopy.
Specifically, we employ a high-purity, single-crystalline diamond nanopillar
probe containing a single Nitrogen-Vacancy (NV) color center. We illustrate the
versatility and performance of our scanning NV sensor by conducting
quantitative nanoscale magnetic field imaging and near-field single-photon
fluorescence quenching microscopy. In both cases, we obtain imaging resolution
in the range of 20 nm and sensitivity unprecedented in scanning quantum probe
microscopy
Quantum control of proximal spins using nanoscale magnetic resonance imaging
Quantum control of individual spins in condensed matter systems is an
emerging field with wide-ranging applications in spintronics, quantum
computation, and sensitive magnetometry. Recent experiments have demonstrated
the ability to address and manipulate single electron spins through either
optical or electrical techniques. However, it is a challenge to extend
individual spin control to nanoscale multi-electron systems, as individual
spins are often irresolvable with existing methods. Here we demonstrate that
coherent individual spin control can be achieved with few-nm resolution for
proximal electron spins by performing single-spin magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI), which is realized via a scanning magnetic field gradient that is both
strong enough to achieve nanometric spatial resolution and sufficiently stable
for coherent spin manipulations. We apply this scanning field-gradient MRI
technique to electronic spins in nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in diamond and
achieve nanometric resolution in imaging, characterization, and manipulation of
individual spins. For NV centers, our results in individual spin control
demonstrate an improvement of nearly two orders of magnitude in spatial
resolution compared to conventional optical diffraction-limited techniques.
This scanning-field-gradient microscope enables a wide range of applications
including materials characterization, spin entanglement, and nanoscale
magnetometry.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
High-sensitivity diamond magnetometer with nanoscale resolution
We present a novel approach to the detection of weak magnetic fields that
takes advantage of recently developed techniques for the coherent control of
solid-state electron spin quantum bits. Specifically, we investigate a magnetic
sensor based on Nitrogen-Vacancy centers in room-temperature diamond. We
discuss two important applications of this technique: a nanoscale magnetometer
that could potentially detect precession of single nuclear spins and an optical
magnetic field imager combining spatial resolution ranging from micrometers to
millimeters with a sensitivity approaching few femtotesla/Hz.Comment: 29 pages, 4 figure
A nitrogen-vacancy spin based molecular structure microscope using multiplexed projection reconstruction
Methods and techniques to measure and image beyond the state-of-the-art have
always been influential in propelling basic science and technology. Because
current technologies are venturing into nanoscopic and molecular-scale
fabrication, atomic-scale measurement techniques are inevitable. One such
emerging sensing method uses the spins associated with nitrogen-vacancy (NV)
defects in diamond. The uniqueness of this NV sensor is its atomic size and
ability to perform precision sensing under ambient conditions conveniently
using light and microwaves (MW). These advantages have unique applications in
nanoscale sensing and imaging of magnetic fields from nuclear spins in single
biomolecules. During the last few years, several encouraging results have
emerged towards the realization of an NV spin-based molecular structure
microscope. Here, we present a projection-reconstruction method that retrieves
the three-dimensional structure of a single molecule from the nuclear spin
noise signatures. We validate this method using numerical simulations and
reconstruct the structure of a molecular phantom \b{eta}-cyclodextrin,
revealing the characteristic toroidal shape
