Usually, a defect in a diamond is a bad thing. But for engineers, miniscule blips in a diamond’s otherwise stiff crystal structure are paving the way for ultrasensitive quantum sensors that push the limits of today’s technologies. Now, researchers at the University of Chicago’s Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering (PME) have developed a method to optimize these quantum sensors, which can detect tiny perturbations in magnetic or electric fields, among other things.
Their new approach, published in PRX Quantum, takes advantage of the way defects in diamonds or semiconductors behave like qubits— the smallest unit of quantum information.
“Researchers are already using this kind of qubit to make really amazing sensors,” said Prof. Aashish Clerk, senior author of the new work. “What we’ve done is come up with a better way of getting the most information we can out of these qubits.”
Qubits light the way
A perfect diamond is composed of carbon atoms arranged in a repetitive lattice. Replace one of these atoms with something else— like a nitrogen atom— and the way the new, stand-alone atom sits in the midst of the diamond’s hard structure gives it unique quantum properties. Miniscule changes in the surroundings, from temperature to electricity, alter the way this “solid-state defects” spins and stores energy.
Researchers discovered that they can shine a light at one of these qubits and then measure how light is deflected and released to probe its quantum state. In this way, they can use it as a quantum sensor.
Analyzing the information from a solid-state defect, however, is tricky, particularly when many such qubits are embedded in one sensor. As each qubit releases energy, that energy alters the behavior of nearby qubits.
“The qubits all end up correlated with each other in a funny way that doesn’t make sense classically,” said Clerk. “What one qubit does is intimately connected with what other qubits do.”
Moreover, when light shines on a qubit for long enough, it resets to its ground state, losing any information that was encoded in it.
Amplifying information
Clerk, along with colleagues including postdoctoral research fellow Martin Koppenhöfer, the first author of the new paper, set out to ask a basic question about the physics of how qubits interact with each other. In the process of this research, they discovered a new trick to get information out of solid-state defect qubits.
When a network of solid-state defects release energy in a burst of photons, researchers usually gloss over the exact nature of the qubits as this energy is being released; they focus instead on the data before and after this sudden burst.