Broadband EPR Spectroscopy in Diverse Field Conditions Using Optically Detected Nitrogen-Vacancy Centers in Diamond
C. M. Purser, V. P. Bhallamudi, C. S. Wolfe, H. Yusuf, B. A., McCullian, C. Jayaprakash, M. E. Flatt\'e, and P. C. Hammel

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a broadband, non-resonant EPR detection method using NV centers in diamond, enabling sensitive magnetic resonance imaging across diverse field conditions without requiring microwave control.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel non-resonant, broadband EPR detection protocol utilizing NV centers, eliminating the need for direct microwave manipulation and spectral overlap.
Findings
Detects EPR spectra under various magnetic field conditions
Relies on a two-phonon relaxation process for coupling
Potential for biological sensing with nanodiamonds
Abstract
Paramagnetic magnetic resonance, a powerful technique for characterizing and identifying chemical targets, is increasingly used for imaging; however, low spin polarization at room temperature and moderate magnetic fields poses challenges for detecting small numbers of spins. In this work, we use fluorescence from nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in diamond to detect the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrum of optically inactive target spins under various conditions of field magnitude and orientation. The protocol requires neither direct microwave manipulation of the NV spins nor spectral overlap between NV and target spin resonances, thus enabling broadband detection. This unexpected non-resonant coupling is attributable to a two-phonon process that relaxes NV spins proximate to the fluctuating dipole moment of the target spin, suggesting that the sensitivity is determined by the…
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