Wide-band, nanoscale magnetic resonance spectroscopy using quantum relaxation of a single spin in diamond
James D. A. Wood, David A. Broadway, Liam T. Hall, Alastair Stacey,, David A. Simpson, Jean-Philippe Tetienne, and Lloyd C. L. Hollenberg

TL;DR
This paper introduces a wide-band, all-optical nanoscale magnetic resonance spectroscopy method using quantum relaxation of a single nitrogen-vacancy spin in diamond, capable of detecting both electron and nuclear spins at ambient conditions.
Contribution
It presents a novel $T_1$-MR technique that achieves broadband detection of spin resonances, including nuclear spins, with potential single-spin sensitivity.
Findings
Successfully measured $T_1$-MR spectra of $^{14}$N impurities in diamond.
Detected both GHz-range electron and MHz-range nuclear spin transitions.
Theoretically predicted single-proton sensitivity with current technology.
Abstract
We demonstrate a wide-band all-optical method of nanoscale magnetic resonance (MR) spectroscopy under ambient conditions. Our method relies on cross-relaxation between a probe spin, the electronic spin of a nitrogen-vacancy centre in diamond, and target spins as the two systems are tuned into resonance. By optically monitoring the spin relaxation time () of the probe spin while varying the amplitude of an applied static magnetic field, a frequency spectrum of the target spin resonances, a -MR spectrum, is obtained. As a proof of concept, we measure -MR spectra of a small ensemble of N impurities surrounding the probe spin within the diamond, with each impurity comprising an electron spin 1/2 and a nuclear spin 1. The intrinsically large bandwidth of the technique and probe properties allows us to detect both electron spin transitions -- in the GHz range -- and…
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