Nuclear quadrupole resonance spectroscopy with a femtotesla diamond
magnetometer
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2302.12401v1
- Date: Fri, 24 Feb 2023 02:09:26 GMT
- Title: Nuclear quadrupole resonance spectroscopy with a femtotesla diamond
magnetometer
- Authors: Yaser Silani, Janis Smits, Ilja Fescenko, Michael W. Malone, Andrew F.
McDowell, Andrey Jarmola, Pauli Kehayias, Bryan Richards, Nazanin Mosavian,
Nathaniel Ristoff, Victor M. Acosta
- Abstract summary: We demonstrate a femtotesla RF magnetometer based on an NV-doped diamond membrane inserted between two ferrite flux concentrators.
The device operates in bias magnetic fields of 2-10 microtesla and provides a 300-fold amplitude enhancement within the diamond for RF magnetic fields in the 0.07-3.6 MHz range.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: Sensitive Radio-Frequency (RF) magnetometers that can detect oscillating
magnetic fields at the femtotesla level are needed for demanding applications
such as Nuclear Quadrupole Resonance (NQR) spectroscopy. RF magnetometers based
on Nitrogen-Vacancy (NV) centers in diamond have been predicted to offer
femtotesla sensitivity, but published experiments have largely been limited to
the picotesla level. Here, we demonstrate a femtotesla RF magnetometer based on
an NV-doped diamond membrane inserted between two ferrite flux concentrators.
The device operates in bias magnetic fields of 2-10 microtesla and provides a
~300-fold amplitude enhancement within the diamond for RF magnetic fields in
the 0.07-3.6 MHz range. The magnetometer's sensitivity is ~70 fT s^{1/2} at
0.35 MHz, and the noise floor decreases to below 2 fT after 1 hour of
acquisition. We used this sensor to detect the 3.6 MHz NQR signal of 14N in
sodium nitrite powder at room temperature. NQR signals are amplified by a
resonant RF coil wrapped around the sample, allowing for higher signal-to-noise
ratio detection. The diamond RF magnetometer's recovery time after a strong RF
pulse is ~35 us, limited by the coil ring-down time. The sodium-nitrite NQR
frequency shifts linearly with temperature as -1.00 +/- 0.02 kHz/K, the
magnetization dephasing time is T2* = 887 +/- 51 us, and a spin-lock spin-echo
pulse sequence extends the signal lifetime to 332 +/- 23 ms, all consistent
with coil-based NQR studies. Our results expand the sensitivity frontier of
diamond magnetometers to the femtotesla range, with potential applications in
security, medical imaging, and materials science.
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