Electron spin resonance of nitrogen-vacancy centers in optically trapped nanodiamonds

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Abstract

Using an optical tweezers apparatus, we demonstrate threedimensional control of nanodiamonds in solution with simultaneous readout of ground-state electron-spin resonance (ESR) transitions in an ensemble of diamond nitrogen-vacancy color centers. Despite the motion and random orientation of nitrogen-vacancy centers suspended in the optical trap, we observe distinct peaks in the measured ESR spectra qualitatively similar to the same measurement in bulk. Accounting for the random dynamics, we model the ESR spectra observed in an externally applied magnetic field to enable dc magnetometry in solution. We estimate the dc magnetic field sensitivity based on variations in ESR line shapes to be approximately 50 μT/√Hz. This technique may provide a pathway for spin-based magnetic, electric, and thermal sensing in fluidic environments and biophysical systems inaccessible to existing scanning probe techniques.

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Horowitz, V. R., Alemán, B. J., Christle, D. J., Cleland, A. N., & Awschalom, D. D. (2012). Electron spin resonance of nitrogen-vacancy centers in optically trapped nanodiamonds. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 109(34), 13493–13497. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1211311109

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