ORIENTATION INDEPENDENT, ROOM TEMPERATURE, HYPERPOLARIZATION OF DIAMOND NANO- AND MICRO-PARTICLES
20210221691 · 2021-07-22
Inventors
- Alexander Pines (Berkeley, CA)
- Ashok Ajoy (Fremont, CA, US)
- Raffi Nazaryan (Tujunga, CA, US)
- XUDONG LV (EL SOBRANTE, CA, US)
- CARLOS MERILES (NEW YORK, NY, US)
Cpc classification
G01R33/282
PHYSICS
B01J19/121
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
C01B32/28
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01J19/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A method of hyperpolarizing diamond particles includes applying a laser to a sample of the diamond particles, irradiating the diamond particles with a sweeping microwave to cause diamond polarization, shuttling the diamond particles through a magnetic field to detect .sup.13C nuclei in the diamond particles, and relaying the diamond polarization to nuclear spins to one of a surrounding solid or fluid.
Claims
1. A method of hyperpolarizing diamond particles, comprising: applying a laser to a sample of the diamond particles; irradiating the diamond particles with a sweeping microwave to cause diamond polarization; shuttling the diamond particles through a magnetic field to detect .sup.13C nuclei in the diamond particles; and relaying the diamond polarization to nuclear spins to one of a surrounding solid or fluid.
2. The method as claimed in claim 1, further comprising freezing the sample.
3. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein applying the laser comprises optically pumping the laser prior to application.
4. The method as claimed in claim 3, wherein optically pumping the laser comprises optically pumping the laser for a time period of 1 second to tens of minutes.
5. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein applying the laser comprises applying the laser in a shielded volume below the magnetic field prior to shuttling.
6. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein applying the laser to the sample comprises applying the laser to a dry sample.
7. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein applying the laser to the sample comprises applying the laser to a sample in solution.
8. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein irradiating the diamond particles comprises irradiating the diamond particles with laser and microwave held at different magnetic field ranges from 0-1 Tesla.
9. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein irradiating the diamond nanoparticles comprises sweeping the microwaves in a ramp.
10. The method as claimed in claim 9, wherein the ramp comprises a low-to-high ramp.
11. The method as claimed in claim 9, wherein the ramp comprises a high-to-low ramp.
12. The method as claimed in claim 9, wherein multiple ramps are cascaded to produce a microwave frequency comb.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0005]
[0006]
[0007]
[0008]
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
[0015] The embodiments here overcome these challenges to obtain the first optically hyperpolarized diamond powder, obtaining high bulk .sup.13C polarization comparable to the best results in single crystals. A new, remarkably simple, low-field optical DNP technique has been developed that proves to be fully orientation independent. Unlike conventional DNP, the regime performed the transfer at is rather unique—in effect, the NV (nitrogen vacancy) electrons can be polarized independent of field, and low-field exploited to circumvent the broadening of the electronic linewidth.
[0016] Some of the terms used here have particular meanings. For example, ‘low field’ as used here refers to magnetic fields with a field strength of 0-1 Tesla (T). The polarization field will be referred to as B.sub.pol. The term “diamond particles” means single crystal diamonds, diamond micro-particles and diamond nano-particles.
[0017] In contrast to previous work on single NV centers or small ensembles, here the bulk nuclear polarization is unambiguously detected by inductive readout subsequent to rapidly shuttling the hyperpolarized powder to high field shown in
[0018] In
[0019] Shuttling is enabled by a carbon fiber rod 18 that carries the sample. The rod is mounted on a movable twin carriage on the fast conveyer belt actuator stage 20. The NMR tube 22, shown in an exploded view to the side, which carries the sample is attached to the shuttling rod by a pressure fit arrangement using a pair of O-rings. Diamond powder sample 28 is contained with a dielectric mirror plunger 26 employed to increase the efficiency of optical excitation. An iron shielded volume 16 is placed on sliding rails to counter the magnetic force from the 7 T magnet 12. The bore of the 7 T magnet is sealed with a Teflon guide that ensures the perfectly aligned shuttling and high fill-factor for inductive readout.
[0020] The process takes either diamond particles in dry or solution form, and places it into the apparatus. The apparatus has a microwave source 28 that irradiates the sample at low field (B.sub.pol0-1 T) after which the sample is shuttled rapidly for bulk inductive readout at 7 T. The polarization enhancement is quantified with respect to the thermal signal at 7 T.
[0021]
[0022] Nuclear hyperpolarization is affected by sweeping microwave irradiation across the NV center powder pattern at a low field B.sub.pol≈0-1 T under continuous laser irradiation. Overall, the embodiments present a significant advance towards an optical diamond polarizer shown in
[0023]
[0024]
[0025] Even more remarkably, the technique here allows exquisite control of the hyperpolarization direction as shown in
[0026] The sign control of hyperpolarization is a consequence of the DNP mechanism being a coherent process, driven by a series of successive rapid adiabatic population swaps. This is substantiated in
[0027] To demonstrate more precisely that all NV center orientations contribute to the obtained hyperpolarization signal, the process maps the underlying electronic powder pattern via the .sup.13C signal as shown in
[0028]
[0029] Low field also comes with the added benefit of long target nuclear T1's in the external liquid due to reduced chemical shift anisotropy, allowing the potential for higher buildup of polarization. For instance, .sup.13C spins in pyruvate, an important molecule in the metabolic cycle and cancer detection, can exceed 55 s at 10 mT. When mildly frozen, for instance at liquid nitrogen temperature, the resulting T1 can be nearly an hour. The only cost one pays, however, is the lower nuclear T1 times in diamond at low fields, which limits the time period for spin diffusion within each particle. There is a strong indication that the .sup.13C lifetime is set by their interactions to the dominant dipole coupled electronic spin bath consisting of nitrogen impurities (P1 centers). Recent advances in diamond growth with high (>20%) NV center conversion efficiency give optimism that they can be effectively mitigated. Moreover, there is strong evidence that .sup.13C lifetimes can be maintained rather long even for particles sizes down to 100 nm.
[0030]
[0031] The dynamics for negative hyperfine couplings are qualitatively different. The more weakly avoided crossings occur between branches within the same electron spin manifold, with the consequence that the nuclear spin polarization buildup becomes inefficient in either sweep direction
[0032] In conclusion, the embodiments here have developed a new DNP technique for polarization transfer from NV centers in diamond that is completely orientation independent, and demonstrated its application for hyperpolarizing .sup.13C nuclei in diamond microparticles to >0:12% bulk polarization level. The method was also found to work on smaller particles (1 μm), although DNP enhancements were reduced because lower NV concentrations and shorter T1. The embodiments of low-field optical DNP mechanism is fundamentally unique, the entire electronic spectrum contributing constructively to the polarization buildup, and allowing on-demand control on the hyperpolarization direction. This work paves the way towards exploiting the large surface area and optical polarizabilty intrinsic to diamond particles for optically hyperpolarizing a liquid at room temperature. Moreover, it presents an advance towards magnetic resonance imaging modalities for biosensing constructed out of optically hyperpolarized, surface functionalized, diamond particles.
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[0043] It will be appreciated that variants of the above-disclosed and other features and functions, or alternatives thereof, may be combined into many other different systems or applications. Various presently unforeseen or unanticipated alternatives, modifications, variations, or improvements therein may be subsequently made by those skilled in the art which are also intended to be encompassed by the following claims.