The 63rd JSAP Spring Meeting, 2016

Presentation information

Oral presentation

6 Thin Films and Surfaces » 6.2 Carbon-based thin films

[19p-H103-1~21] 6.2 Carbon-based thin films

Sat. Mar 19, 2016 1:15 PM - 7:00 PM H103 (H)

Hiroshi Kawarada(Waseda Univ.), Tokuyuki Teraji(NIMS), Shozo Kono(Waseda Univ.), Norio Tokuda(Kanazawa Univ.)

4:15 PM - 4:30 PM

[19p-H103-12] Super-high-sensitivity NMR by using NV centers in diamond

Junichi Isoya1, Hitoshi Sumiya2, Jochen Scheuer3, Ilai Schwartz3, Qiong Chen3, David Schulze-Suenninghausden4, Patrick Carl5, Peter Hoefer5, Alexander Retzker6, Burkhard Luy4, Martin Plenio3, Boris Naydenov3, Fedor Jelezko3 (1.Tsukuba Univ., 2.SEI, 3.Ulm Univ., 4.Karlsruhe IT, 5.Bruker, 6.Hebrew Univ.)

Keywords:diamond,NV center,DNP

Enhancing sensitivity is continuously demanded in NMR and MRI which are capable of supplying abundant information in chemistry, biochemistry, medicine, and material science. Electron spins of NV centers in diamond are highly polarized (~96%) by light illumination at room temperature. Strong enhancement of NMR signals is expected if this high polarization is transferred to nuclear spins. By using a pulsed ESR spectrometer, microwave pulse sequence called NOVEL (spin locking with the agreement of Rabi frequency of electron spins and 13C NMR frequency) was applied to a single crystal diamond ([NV]=0.05 ppm, [P1]=0.4 ppm) at room temperature. After transferring the sample to NMR spectrometer, strong 13C-NMR signal has been attained at room temperature. Feasibility using nanodiamond containing NV centers for applications such as DNP reagent and biomarkers traced in vivo by MRI will be discussed.