Abstract

Single nitrogen-vacancy (NV) defect centers in diamond have been exploited as single photon sources and spin qubits due to their room-temperature robust quantum light emission and long electron spin coherence times. They were coupled to a manifold of structures, such as optical cavities, plasmonic waveguides, and even injected into living cells to study fundamental interactions of various nature at the nanoscale. Of particular interest are applications of NVs as quantum sensors for local nanomagnetometry. Here, we employ a nanomanipulation approach to couple a single NV center in a nanodiamond to a single few-nm superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticle in a controlled way. After measuring via relaxometry the magnetic particle spin-noise, we take advantage of the crystal strain ms = ± 1 spin level separation to detect the superparamagnetic particle’s effect in presence of a driving AC magnetic field. Our experiments provide detailed insight in the behavior of such particles with respect to high frequency fields. The approach can be extended to the investigation of increasingly complex, but controlled nanomagnetic hybrid particle assemblies. Moreover, our results suggest that superparamagnetic nanoparticles can amplify local magnetic interactions in order to improve the sensitivity of diamond nanosensors for specific measurement scenarios.

Highlights

  • We start our experiment with a prepared microwave coplanar waveguide (MW-CPW) patterned glass support where a selected nanodiamond containing a single NV center was positioned by atomic force microscopy (AFM) manipulation in proximity to a small cluster of previously spin-coated SPIONs

  • Fast varying magnetic fields with a frequency comparable to the NV center Larmor frequency and oriented orthogonally to the NV center quantization axis can be detected via electron spin relaxometry[31,32]

  • By using the 2D static magnetic field provided by the Helmholtz coils we estimate the NV center axis to have a deviation angle from the x’ coil axis corresponding to 72 ± 1 deg

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Summary

Introduction

(b) AFM scan of a 50 nm nanodiamond and a 11 nm SPION with a separation >300 nm. (c) AFM scan after the SPION nanomanipulation showing a separation

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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