Luminescent Organic Triplet Diradicals as Optically Addressable Molecular Qubits
ORAL · Invited
Abstract
Optical-spin interfaces that enable the photoinitialization, coherent microwave manipulation, and optical read-out of ground state spins have been studied extensively in solid state defects such as diamond nitrogen vacancy (NV) centers and are promising for quantum information science applications, especially quantum sensing. Molecular quantum bits offer many advantages over solid state spin centers through synthetic control of their optical and spin properties and their scalability into well-defined multi-qubit arrays. In this work, we report an optical-spin interface in an organic molecular qubit consisting of two luminescent tris(2,4,6-trichlorophenyl)methyl (TTM) radicals connected via the meta-positions of a phenyl linker. The triplet ground state of this system can be photoinitialized in its │T0〉state by shelving triplet populations as singlets through spin-selective excited-state intersystem crossing with 80% selectivity from │T<span style="font-size:10.8333px">+1〉and │T<span style="font-size:10.8333px">-1〉. The fluorescence intensity in the triplet manifold is determined by the ground-state polarization, and we show successful optical read-out of the ground-state spin following microwave manipulations by fluorescence-detected magnetic resonance spectroscopy. At 85 K, the lifetime of the polarized ground state is 45 ± 3 μs, and the ground state phase memory time is Tm = 5.9 ± 0.1 μs, which increases to 26.8 ± 1.6 μs at 5 K. These results show that luminescent diradicals with triplet ground states can serve as optically addressable molecular qubits with long spin coherence times, which marks an important step towards the rational design of spin-optical interfaces in organic materials.
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Publication: Kopp, S. M.; Nakamura, S.; Phelan, B. T.; Poh, Y. R.; Tyndall, S. B.; Brown, P. J.; Huang, Y.; Yuen-Zhou, J.; Krzyaniak, M. D.; Wasielewski, M. R. Luminescent organic diradicals as optically addressable molecular qubits. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2024, 146, 27935-27945.
Presenters
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Michael R Wasielewski
Northwestern University
Authors
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Michael R Wasielewski
Northwestern University
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Sebastian M Kopp
Northwestern University
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Shunta Nakamura
Northwestern University
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Brian T Phelan
Northwestern University
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Yong Rui Poh
UC San diego
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Samuel B Tyndall
Northwestern University
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Paige J Brown
Northwestern University
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Yuheng Huang
Northwestern University
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Joel Yuen-Zhou
University of California, San Diego, UC San Diego
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Matthew D Krzyaniak
Northwestern University