(Press-News.org) Diamond has long been the go-to material for quantum sensing due to its coherent nitrogen-vacancy centres, controllable spin, sensitivity to magnetic fields, and ability to be used at room temperature. With such a suitable material so easy to fabricate and scale, there’s been little interest in exploring diamond alternatives. But this GOAT of the quantum world has one Achilles Heel… It’s too big. Just as an NFL linebacker is not the best sportsperson to ride in the Kentucky Derby, diamond is not an ideal material when exploring quantum sensors and information processing. When diamonds get too small, the super-stable defect it’s renowned for begins to crumble. There is a limit at which diamond becomes useless.
Enter hBN.
hBN has previously been overlooked as a quantum sensor and a platform for quantum information processing. This changed recently when a number of new defects were discovered that are shaping up to be compelling competitors to diamond’s nitrogen vacancy centers. Of these the boron vacancy center (a single missing atom in the hBN crystal lattice) has emerged as the most promising to date. It can, however, exist in various charge states and only the -1 charge state is suitable for spin-based applications. The other charge states have, so far, been challenging to detect and study. This was problematic as the charge state can flicker, switching between the –1 and 0 states, making it unstable especially in the types of environments that are typical for quantum devices and sensors.
But as outlined in a paper published today in Nano Letters, researchers from TMOS, the ARC Centre of Excellence for Transformative Meta-Optical Systems have developed a method to stabilize the –1 state, and a new experimental approach for studying the charge states of defects in hBNusing optical excitation and concurrent electron beam irradiation.
Co-lead author Angus Gale says, “This research shows that hBN has the potential to replace diamond as the preferential material for quantum sensing and quantum information processing because we can stabilize the atomic defects that underpin these applications resulting in 2D hBN layers that could be integrated into devices where diamond can’t be.”
Co-lead author Dominic Scognamiglio says, “We’ve characterized this material and discovered unique and very cool properties, but the study of hBN is in its early days. There are no other publications on charge state switching, manipulation or stability of boron vacancies, which is why we’re taking the first step in filling this literature gap and understanding this material better.”
Chief Investigator Milos Toth says, “The next phase of this research will focus on pump-probe measurements that will allow us to optimize defects in hBN for applications in sensing and integrated quantum photonics.”
Quantum sensing is a rapidly advancing field. Quantum sensors promise of better sensitivity and spatial resolution than conventional sensors. Of its many applications, one of the most criticial for Industry 4.0 and the further miniaturisation of devices is precise sensing of temperature as well as electric and magnetic fields in microelectronic devices. Being able to sense sense these is key to controlling them. Thermal management is currently one of the factors limiting furthering the performance of miniaturised devices. Precise quantum sensing at the nanoscale will help prevent overheating of microchips and improve performance and reliability.
Quantum sensing also has significant applications in the medtech sphere, where its ability to detect magnetic nanoparticles and molecules could one day be used as an injectable diagnostic tool that searches for cancer cells, or it could monitor the metabolic processes in cells to track the impact of medical treatments.
In order to study the boron vacancy defects in hBN, the TMOS team created a new experimental setup that integrated a confocal photoluminescent microscope with a scanning electron microscope (SEM). This allowed them to simultaneously manipulate the charge states of boron vacancy defects with the electron beam and electronic micro-circuits, whilst measuring the defect.
Gale says, “The approach is novel in that it allows us to focus the laser onto and image individual defects in hBN, whilst they are manipulated using electronic circuits and using an electron beam. This modification to the microscope is unique; it was incredibly useful and streamlined our workflow significantly.”
For more information about this research, contact connect@tmos.org.au
Manipulating the Charge State of Spin Defects in Hexagonal Boron Nitride
Angus Gale, Dominic Scognamiglio, Ivan Zhigulin, Benjamin Whitefield, Mehran Kianinia, Igor Aharonovich, Milos Toth
Nano Letters, June 2023: https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.nanolett.3c01678
Negatively charged boron vacancies (VB−) in hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) have recently gained interest as spin defects for quantum information processing and quantum sensing by a layered material. However, the boron vacancy can exist in a number of charge states in the hBN lattice, but only the -1 state has spin-dependent photoluminescence and acts as a spin-photon interface. Here, we investigate charge state switching of VB defects under laser and electron beam excitation. We demonstrate deterministic, reversible switching between the -1 and 0 states (VB −⇌VB0 +e−), occurring at rates controlled by excess electrons or holes injected into hBN by a layered heterostructure device. Our work provides a means to monitor and manipulate the VB charge state, and to stabilize the -1 state which is a prerequisite for optical spin manipulation and readout of the defect.
END
Move over diamond. hBN is quantum’s new best friend.
2023-06-27
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Personalized dosing in prostate cancer treatment improves patient outcomes
2023-06-27
Chicago, Illinois (Embargoed until 3:45 p.m. CDT, Tuesday, June 27, 2023)—By monitoring early-response biomarkers in men undergoing 177Lu-PSMA prostate cancer treatment, physicians can personalize dosing intervals, significantly improving patient outcomes. In a study presented at the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging 2023 Annual Meeting, early stratification with 177Lu-SPECT/CT allowed men responding to treatment to take a “treatment holiday” and allowed those not responding the option to switch to another treatment.
Approved by the U.S. Food ...
Genomics- and image-guided subtyping refines characterization of Alzheimer’s disease
2023-06-27
Chicago, Illinois (Embargoed until 4:05 p.m. CDT, Tuesday, June 27, 2023)—A new computational technique that combines genomic and tau PET imaging data promises a more personalized approach for subtyping Alzheimer’s disease. Based on a novel clustering framework using sparse canonical correlation analysis (SCCA), the integrated approach was successful in identifying four subtypes of Alzheimer’s disease and the top genes associated with each. This research was presented at the 2023 Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging Annual ...
A jaw-dropping conundrum: Why do mammals have a stiff lower jaw?
2023-06-27
From the 20-foot-long jawbones of the filter-feeding blue whale to the short, but bone-crushing, jaws of the hyena and the delicate chin bones of a human, the pair of lower jawbones characteristic of mammals have evolved with amazing variation.
But at first glance, having a single bone on each side of the head — which creates a stiff lower jaw, or mandible — doesn't appear to give mammals an advantage over other vertebrates, which have at least two and as many as 11 bones comprising each side of the lower jaw.
Crocodiles, for example, have an edge over hyenas when it comes to their bite strength relative to ...
New research by Sylvester Cancer shows unmet support needs can lead to worse clinical outcomes
2023-06-27
MIAMI, FLORIDA (June 27, 2023) – Cancer patients with unmet supportive care needs are more likely to experience worse clinical outcomes, including more emergency department (ED) visits and hospitalizations, according to new research from Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine.
The study, published June 21 in JAMA Network Open, also found that Black race, Hispanic ethnicity and factors such as anxiety, depression, pain, poor physical function and low health-related quality-of-life ...
Higher doses of oral semaglutide improves blood sugar control and weight loss
2023-06-27
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – Diabetes is a progressive disease that affects one’s ability to control blood sugar levels. For many patients, the condition becomes more severe over time and blood sugar levels grow more difficult to manage. Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists, such as semaglutide, have granted patients more control in lowering of blood sugar.
John Buse, MD, PhD, the Verne S. Caviness Distinguished Professor of Medicine in the Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, and an international team of researchers have presented new findings about new higher-dose formulations ...
Age of those with mismatched biological sex and gender identity (gender dysphoria) is falling
2023-06-27
The age of those who are distressed because of a mismatch between their biological sex and their gender identity—known as gender dysphoria—has been steadily falling, reveals research published in the open access journal General Psychiatry.
And it’s lower for those assigned female sex at birth than those assigned male, the findings indicate.
Recent studies suggest that gender dysphoria is becoming more common, particularly among those assigned female sex at birth. But these studies have been hampered by small sample sizes, short monitoring periods, or outdated datasets.
In a bid to get round these limitations, the researchers drew on data submitted ...
Mediation’s role in parental disputes about child’s medical treatment may have been oversold
2023-06-27
The role of mediation in preventing disputes between parents and doctors about a seriously ill child’s medical treatment from escalating to litigation may be more limited than hoped for, suggests an analysis of rulings, published online in the Archives of Disease in Childhood.
It might have avoided only just under half of these published court cases heard since 1990 in England and Wales, the analysis suggests.
Contested medical treatment decisions for children litigated in the courts of England and Wales may be on the rise, say the researchers.
While 10 and 11 such ...
Ask us how to build the circular economy, say scientists
2023-06-27
Governments and companies planning to pursue the circular economy need to involve scientists more directly, states a new report published by the International Society for Industrial Ecology, and led by UCL’s Dr Stijn van Ewijk.
The report, published today, draws attention to the weight of relevant expertise found in the field of industrial ecology, a discipline that has been focusing on the minimisation of waste, predicting the impacts of new products, and designing environmentally friendly systems for decades.
The ...
DNA discovery may assist in fight against aggressive cancer
2023-06-27
In a significant development in the fight against fatal cancers, University of Otago researchers have pinpointed a key feature that leads to the aggressive spread of colon cancer.
Led by Associate Professor Aniruddha Chatterjee and Drs Euan Rodger and Rachel Purcell, researchers discovered abnormalities in the DNA instruction code that lead to the aggressive spread of colorectal (bowel) cancer – Aotearoa’s second highest cause of cancer death.
Dr Rodger says the finding – published in the Cell Press journal ...
Addressing health in areas characterized by persistent poverty
2023-06-27
The Center for Health Outcomes and Population Equity (HOPE) at Huntsman Cancer Institute and the University of Utah (the U), in partnership with the Montana State University Center for American Indian and Rural Health Equity (CAIRHE), received a grant for Cancer Control in Persistent Poverty Areas from the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National Institutes of Health. The new grant is part of the National Cancer Moonshot, led by the Biden-Harris Administration, and it will bring together the expertise of the Center for HOPE and CAIRHE to expand their impact through two initiatives that ...