Power-law scaling of correlations in statistically polarised nano-NMR

NPJ QUANTUM INFORMATION(2022)

Cited 2|Views23
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Abstract
Diffusion noise is a major source of spectral line broadening in liquid state nano-scale nuclear magnetic resonance with shallow nitrogen-vacancy centres, whose main consequence is a limited spectral resolution. This limitation arises by virtue of the widely accepted assumption that nuclear spin signal correlations decay exponentially in nano-NMR. However, a more accurate analysis of diffusion shows that correlations survive for a longer time due to a power-law scaling, yielding the possibility for improved resolution and altering our understanding of diffusion at the nano-scale. Nevertheless, such behaviour remains to be demonstrated in experiments. Using three different experimental setups and disparate measurement techniques, we present overwhelming evidence of power-law decay of correlations. These result in sharp-peaked spectral lines, for which diffusion broadening need not be a limitation to resolution.
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Key words
Electronic and spintronic devices,Quantum metrology,Physics,general,Quantum Physics,Quantum Information Technology,Spintronics,Quantum Computing,Quantum Field Theories,String Theory,Classical and Quantum Gravitation,Relativity Theory
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