Demonstration and Application of Long-lived state in a four-spin system hyperpolarized at room temperature

ORAL

Abstract

A solution with hyperpolarized nuclear spins encoded into a long-lived state has been utilized for sensing chemical phenomena in vivo and in vitro. In a conventional way, nuclear spins are hyperpolarized at very low temperatures, and it needs a large-scale setup with a cryogenic instrument. In this work, we demonstrate the encoding of a four-nuclear-spin system hyperpolarized at room temperature into a long-lived state in a solution. Both room temperature hyperpolarization and quantum encoded sensor are a hot topic in quantum sensing. Experiments are performed for the aromatic protons in p-chlorobenzoic acid. The lifetime of spin polarization was increased 2.4 times by the quantum encoding. We apply the solution with the long-lived state as a sensor in ligand--receptor binding experiments.

*This work was supported by CREST (JST grant number JPMJCR16721) and PRESTO (JST grant number JPMJPR1666 and JPMJPR18G5). K.M. is supported by JSPS KAKENHI No. 19J10976 and Program for Leading Graduate Schools: Interactive Materials Science Cadet Program.

Presenters

  • Koichiro Miyanishi

    • Graduate school of Engineering Science, Osaka Univ

Authors

  • Koichiro Miyanishi

    • Graduate school of Engineering Science, Osaka Univ
  • Naoki Ichijo

    • Graduate school of Engineering Science, Osaka Univ
  • Makoto Motoyama

    • Graduate school of Engineering Science, Osaka Univ
  • Akinori Kagawa

    • Graduate school of Engineering Science, Osaka Univ
  • Makoto Negoro

    • Quantum Information and Quantum Biology Division, Institute for Open and Transdisciplinary Research Initiatives, Osaka Univ
    • Osaka Univ
  • Masahiro Kitagawa

    • Graduate school of Engineering Science, Osaka Univ
    • Osaka Univ