4.8 Article

Room-Temperature Defect Qubits in Ultrasmall Nanocrystals

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY LETTERS
Volume 11, Issue 5, Pages 1675-1681

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.0c00052

Keywords

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Funding

  1. BME-Nanotechnology FIKP grant of EMMI (BME FIKP-NAT)
  2. National Research Development and Innovation Office of Hungary [NVKP_16-1-2016-0043, KK119442, NN127069, NN127902]
  3. Quantum Technology National Excellence Program [2017-1.2.1-NKP-2017-00001]
  4. Janos Bolyai Scholarship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
  5. UNKP-19 New National Excellence program
  6. Charles University research center [UNCE/SCI/010]
  7. [NTP-NFTO-18-B-0243]

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There is an urgent quest for room-temperature qubits in nanometer-sized, ultrasmall nanocrystals for quantum biosensing, hyperpolarization of biomolecules, and quantum information processing. Thus far, the preparation of such qubits at the nanoscale has remained futile. Here, we present a synthesis method that avoids any interaction of the solid with high-energy particles and uses self-propagated high-temperature synthesis with a subsequent electrochemical method, the no-photon exciton generation chemistry to produce room-temperature qubits in ultrasmall nanocrystals of sizes down to 3 nm with high yield. We first create the host silicon carbide (SiC) crystallites by high-temperature synthesis and then apply wet chemical etching, which results in ultrasmall SiC nanocrystals and facilitates the creation of thermally stable defect qubits in the material. We demonstrate room-temperature optically detected magnetic resonance signal of divacancy qubits with 3.5% contrast from these nanoparticles with emission wavelengths falling in the second biological window (1000-1380 nm). These results constitute the formation of nonperturbative bioagents for quantum sensing and efficient hyperpolarization.

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