TY - JOUR
T1 - Single spin magnetic resonance
AU - Wrachtrup, Joerg
AU - Finkler, Amit
N1 - We would like to thank Matthias Pfender, Nabeel Aslam, Sebastian Zaiser, Thomas Häberle and Dominik Schmid-Lorch for critical and fruitful discussions and Durga Dasari Bhaktavatsala Rao for proof-reading the manuscript. This work was partially funded by DARPA (QuASAR) and the EU (DIADEMS). A.F. acknowledges financial support from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation.
PY - 2016/8/1
Y1 - 2016/8/1
N2 - Different approaches have improved the sensitivity of either electron or nuclear magnetic resonance to the single spin level. For optical detection it has essentially become routine to observe a single electron spin or nuclear spin. Typically, the systems in use are carefully designed to allow for single spin detection and manipulation, and of those systems, diamond spin defects rank very high, being so robust that they can be addressed, read out and coherently controlled even under ambient conditions and in a versatile set of nanostructures. This renders them as a new type of sensor, which has been shown to detect single electron and nuclear spins among other quantities like force, pressure and temperature. Adapting pulse sequences from classic NMR and EPR, and combined with high resolution optical microscopy, proximity to the target sample and nanoscale size, the diamond sensors have the potential to constitute a new class of magnetic resonance detectors with single spin sensitivity. As diamond sensors can be operated under ambient conditions, they offer potential application across a multitude of disciplines. Here we review the different existing techniques for magnetic resonance, with a focus on diamond defect spin sensors, showing their potential as versatile sensors for ultra-sensitive magnetic resonance with nanoscale spatial resolution.
AB - Different approaches have improved the sensitivity of either electron or nuclear magnetic resonance to the single spin level. For optical detection it has essentially become routine to observe a single electron spin or nuclear spin. Typically, the systems in use are carefully designed to allow for single spin detection and manipulation, and of those systems, diamond spin defects rank very high, being so robust that they can be addressed, read out and coherently controlled even under ambient conditions and in a versatile set of nanostructures. This renders them as a new type of sensor, which has been shown to detect single electron and nuclear spins among other quantities like force, pressure and temperature. Adapting pulse sequences from classic NMR and EPR, and combined with high resolution optical microscopy, proximity to the target sample and nanoscale size, the diamond sensors have the potential to constitute a new class of magnetic resonance detectors with single spin sensitivity. As diamond sensors can be operated under ambient conditions, they offer potential application across a multitude of disciplines. Here we review the different existing techniques for magnetic resonance, with a focus on diamond defect spin sensors, showing their potential as versatile sensors for ultra-sensitive magnetic resonance with nanoscale spatial resolution.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84978674748&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmr.2016.06.017
DO - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmr.2016.06.017
M3 - مقالة
SN - 1090-7807
VL - 269
SP - 225
EP - 236
JO - JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE
JF - JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE
ER -