7 research outputs found

    Orientation-independent room temperature optical C-13 hyperpolarization in powdered diamond

    Get PDF
    Dynamic nuclear polarization via contact with electronic spins has emerged as an attractive route to enhance the sensitivity of nuclear magnetic resonance beyond the traditional limits imposed by magnetic field strength and temperature. Among the various alternative implementations, the use of nitrogen vacancy (NV) centers in diamond—a paramagnetic point defect whose spin can be optically polarized at room temperature—has attracted widespread attention, but applications have been hampered by the need to align the NV axis with the external magnetic field. We overcome this hurdle through the combined use of continuous optical illumination and a microwave sweep over a broad frequency range. As a proof of principle, we demonstrate our approach using powdered diamond with which we attain bulk 13C spin polarization in excess of 0.25% under ambient conditions. Remarkably, our technique acts efficiently on diamond crystals of all orientations and polarizes nuclear spins with a sign that depends exclusively on the direction of the microwave sweep. Our work paves the way toward the use of hyperpolarized diamond particles as imaging contrast agents for biosensing and, ultimately, for the hyperpolarization of nuclear spins in arbitrary liquids brought in contact with their surface

    Nuclear spin temperature reversal via continuous radio-frequency driving

    No full text
    Optical spin pumping of color centers in diamond is presently attracting broad interest as a platform for dynamic nuclear polarization at room temperature, but the mechanisms involved in the generation and transport of polarization within the host crystal are still partly understood. Here we investigate the impact of continuous radio-frequency (RF) excitation on the generation of nuclear magnetization produced by optical illumination. In the presence of RF excitation far removed from the nuclear Larmor frequency, we witness a magnetic-field-dependent sign reversal of the measured nuclear spin signal when the drive is sufficiently strong, a counterintuitive finding that immediately points to nontrivial spin dynamics. With the help of analytical and numerical modeling, we show our observations indicate a modified form of solid effect, down-converted from the microwave to the radio-frequency range through the driving of hybrid transitions involving one (or more) nuclei and two (or more) electron spins. Our results open intriguing opportunities for the manipulation of many-electron spin systems by exploiting hyperfine couplings as a means to access otherwise forbidden intraband transitions
    corecore