Quantum probe hyperpolarisation of molecular nuclear spins
David A. Broadway, Jean-Philippe Tetienne, Alastair Stacey, James D., A. Wood, David A. Simpson, Liam T. Hall, and Lloyd C. L. Hollenberg

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a novel quantum probe method using a nitrogen-vacancy center in diamond to hyperpolarize nuclear spins at room temperature, significantly enhancing MRI and NMR signals.
Contribution
It introduces a quantum control protocol for nuclear spin hyperpolarisation using a single qubit, achieving large polarization increases without low temperature or high magnetic fields.
Findings
Achieved six orders of magnitude increase in nuclear spin polarization.
Demonstrated hyperpolarisation of multiple nuclear spin species.
Provided a theoretical framework for scaling up the technique.
Abstract
The hyperpolarisation of nuclear spins within target molecules is a critical and complex challenge in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Hyperpolarisation offers enormous gains in signal and spatial resolution which may ultimately lead to the development of molecular MRI and NMR. At present, techniques used to polarise nuclear spins generally require low temperatures and/or high magnetic fields, radio-frequency control fields, or the introduction of catalysts or free-radical mediators. The emergence of room temperature solid-state spin qubits has opened exciting new pathways to circumvent these requirements to achieve direct nuclear spin hyperpolarisation using quantum control. Employing a novel cross-relaxation induced polarisation (CRIP) protocol using a single nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centre in diamond, we demonstrate the first external…
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