Nanophotonic quantum sensing with engineered spin-optic coupling

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Abstract

Nitrogen vacancy centers in diamond provide a spin-based qubit system with long coherence time even at room temperature, making them suitable ambient-condition quantum sensors for quantities including electromagnetic fields, temperature, and rotation. The optically addressable level structures of NV spins allow transduction of spin information onto light-field intensity. The sub-optimal readout fidelity of conventional fluorescence measurement remains a significant drawback for room-temperature ensemble sensing. Here, we discuss nanophotonic interfaces that provide opportunities to achieve near-unity readout fidelity based on IR absorption via resonantly enhanced spin-optic coupling. Spin-coupled resonant nanophotonic devices are projected to particularly benefit applications that utilize micro- to nanoscale sensing volume and to outperform present methods in their volume-normalized sensitivity.

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Kim, L., Choi, H., Trusheim, M. E., Wang, H., & Englund, D. R. (2023). Nanophotonic quantum sensing with engineered spin-optic coupling. Nanophotonics, 12(3), 441–449. https://doi.org/10.1515/nanoph-2022-0682

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