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Nitrogen vacancy defects in single-particle nanodiamonds sense paramagnetic transition metal spin noise from nanoparticles on a transmission electron microscopy grid

Flinn, Bradley T.; Radu, Valentin; Fay, Michael W.; Tyler, Ashley J.; Pitcairn, Jem; Cliffe, Matthew J.; Weare, Benjamin L.; Stoppiello, Craig T.; Mather, Melissa L.; Khlobystov, Andrei N.

Nitrogen vacancy defects in single-particle nanodiamonds sense paramagnetic transition metal spin noise from nanoparticles on a transmission electron microscopy grid Thumbnail


Authors

Bradley T. Flinn

Valentin Radu

Ashley J. Tyler

Jem Pitcairn

Benjamin L. Weare

Craig T. Stoppiello



Contributors

Abstract

Spin-active nanomaterials play a vital role in current and upcoming quantum technologies, such as spintronics, data storage and computing. To advance the design and application of these materials, methods to link size, shape, structure, and chemical composition with functional magnetic properties at the nanoscale level are needed. In this work, we combine the power of two local probes, namely, Nitrogen Vacancy (NV) spin-active defects in diamond and an electron beam, within experimental platforms used in electron microscopy. Negatively charged NVs within fluorescent nanodiamond (FND) particles are used to sense the local paramagnetic environment of Rb0.5Co1.3[Fe(CN)6]·3.7H2O nanoparticles (NPs), a Prussian blue analogue (PBA), as a function of FND-PBA distance (order of 10 nm) and local PBA concentration. We demonstrate perturbation of NV spins by proximal electron spins of transition metals within NPs, as detected by changes in the photoluminescence (PL) of NVs. Workflows are reported and demonstrated that employ a Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM) finder grid to spatially correlate functional and structural features of the same unique NP studied using NV sensing, based on a combination of Optically Detected Magnetic Resonance (ODMR) and Magnetic Modulation (MM) of NV PL, within TEM imaging modalities. Significantly, spin–spin dipole interactions were detected between NVs in a single FND and paramagnetic metal centre spin fluctuations in NPs through a carbon film barrier of 13 nm thickness, evidenced by TEM tilt series imaging and Electron Energy-Loss Spectroscopy (EELS), opening new avenues to sense magnetic materials encapsulated in or between thin-layered nanostructures. The measurement strategies reported herein provide a pathway towards solid-state quantitative NV sensing with atomic-scale theoretical spatial resolution, critical to the development of quantum technologies, such as memory storage and molecular switching nanodevices.

Citation

Flinn, B. T., Radu, V., Fay, M. W., Tyler, A. J., Pitcairn, J., Cliffe, M. J., …Khlobystov, A. N. (2023). Nitrogen vacancy defects in single-particle nanodiamonds sense paramagnetic transition metal spin noise from nanoparticles on a transmission electron microscopy grid. Nanoscale Advances, 2023(23), 6423-6434. https://doi.org/10.1039/d3na00155e

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Aug 15, 2023
Online Publication Date Aug 18, 2023
Publication Date Dec 7, 2023
Deposit Date Aug 23, 2023
Publicly Available Date Aug 24, 2023
Journal Nanoscale Advances
Print ISSN 2516-0230
Electronic ISSN 2516-0230
Publisher Royal Society of Chemistry
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 2023
Issue 23
Pages 6423-6434
DOI https://doi.org/10.1039/d3na00155e
Keywords General Engineering, General Materials Science, General Chemistry, Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics, Bioengineering
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/24580532
Publisher URL https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2023/NA/D3NA00155E

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