High Magnetic Field Quantum Sensing via Hyperpolarized Nuclei
ORAL
Abstract
In the quest towards high-resolution quantum sensors for applications in sub-micronscale NMR, the high-field
regime is advantageous since it naturally enables chemical shift discrimination and allows higher analyte polarization.
Here we propose and demonstrate a high-field (7T) quantum sensor constructed from hyperpolarized
13C nuclear spins in diamond. The 13C nuclei are initialized via Nitrogen-Vacancy (NV) centers and protected
along a transverse Bloch sphere axis for minute-long periods. When exposed to a time-varying (AC) magnetic
field, they undergo secondary precessions that contain a direct imprint of its frequency. We demonstrate that
high sensitivity and resolution is feasible by harnessing the long rotating frame 13C sensor lifetimes T2'>20 s, over
106 greater than their NV center counterparts, and their ability to be continuously interrogated. For quantum
sensing at 7 T, we demonstrate spectral resolution better than 70 mHz (corresponding to a precision 1 ppm) and
sensitivity better than 20 nT/vHz for a single crystal sample. We discuss the advantages of nuclear magnetometers over conventional NV center
sensors, including deployability in randomly-oriented diamond particles, in optically scattering media, and in a
wide range of bias field environments (1-20 T). Fundamentally, our technique with densely-packed 13C nuclei
demonstrates a new approach for quantum sensing in the “coupled-sensor” limit. This work points to intriguing
opportunities for “targeted” microscale NMR chemical sensors constructed from hyperpolarized
nanodiamonds and portends applications of dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) in quantum sensing.
regime is advantageous since it naturally enables chemical shift discrimination and allows higher analyte polarization.
Here we propose and demonstrate a high-field (7T) quantum sensor constructed from hyperpolarized
13C nuclear spins in diamond. The 13C nuclei are initialized via Nitrogen-Vacancy (NV) centers and protected
along a transverse Bloch sphere axis for minute-long periods. When exposed to a time-varying (AC) magnetic
field, they undergo secondary precessions that contain a direct imprint of its frequency. We demonstrate that
high sensitivity and resolution is feasible by harnessing the long rotating frame 13C sensor lifetimes T2'>20 s, over
106 greater than their NV center counterparts, and their ability to be continuously interrogated. For quantum
sensing at 7 T, we demonstrate spectral resolution better than 70 mHz (corresponding to a precision 1 ppm) and
sensitivity better than 20 nT/vHz for a single crystal sample. We discuss the advantages of nuclear magnetometers over conventional NV center
sensors, including deployability in randomly-oriented diamond particles, in optically scattering media, and in a
wide range of bias field environments (1-20 T). Fundamentally, our technique with densely-packed 13C nuclei
demonstrates a new approach for quantum sensing in the “coupled-sensor” limit. This work points to intriguing
opportunities for “targeted” microscale NMR chemical sensors constructed from hyperpolarized
nanodiamonds and portends applications of dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) in quantum sensing.
–
Publication: High Magnetic Field Quantum Sensing via Hyperpolarized Nuclei (In Preparation)
Presenters
-
Ozgur Sahin
University of California, Berkeley
Authors
-
Ozgur Sahin
University of California, Berkeley
-
Erica de Leon Sanchez
University of California, Berkeley
-
Sophie Conti
University of California, Berkeley
-
Amala Akkiraju
University of California, Berkeley
-
Aakriti Aggarwal
University of California, Berkeley
-
Harlen S Oaks
University of California, Berkeley
-
Paul Reshetikhin
University of California, Berkeley
-
Emanuel Druga
University of California, Berkeley
-
Benjamin Gilbert
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Energy Geoscience Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
-
Sunil A Bhave
Purdue University
-
Ashok Ajoy
University of California, Berkeley