Nanoscale Vector AC Magnetometry with a Single Nitrogen-Vacancy Center in Diamond

POSTER

Abstract

The nanoscale detection of vector AC magnetic fields is desirable in applications ranging from fundamental physics, such as detecting dynamic properties of spins and charges in quantum materials, to engineering, such as microwave (MW) device characterization and optimization. Isolated quantum spin defects, such as the nitrogen-vacancy center in diamond, can achieve the desired spatial resolution with high sensitivity. Still, vector AC magnetometry currently relies on using different orientations of an ensemble of sensors, with degraded spatial resolution, and a protocol based on a single NV is lacking. Here we propose and experimentally demonstrate a protocol that exploits a single NV to reconstruct the vectorial components of an AC magnetic field by tuning a continuous driving to distinct resonance conditions. We map the spatial distribution of an AC field generated by a copper wire on the surface of the diamond. The proposed protocol combines high sensitivity, broad dynamic range, and sensitivity to both coherent and stochastic signals, with broad applications in condensed matter physics, such as probing spin fluctuations.

*This work was supported in part by the DARPA DRINQS program (Cooperative Agreement D18AC00024), ARO W911NF-11-1-0400, and ARO Q-Diamond W911NF13D0001.

Publication: Nano Lett. 2021, 21, 12, 5143–5150

Presenters

  • GUOQING WANG

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI

Authors

  • GUOQING WANG

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI
  • Yi-Xiang Liu

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Yuan Zhu

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Paola Cappellaro

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT