Atomic-scale access to long spin coherence in single molecules with scanning force microscopy
Lisanne Sellies, Raffael Spachtholz, Philipp Scheuerer, Jascha Repp

TL;DR
This study demonstrates atomic-scale electron spin resonance detection using atomic force microscopy on single molecules, achieving long coherence times and high energy resolution, advancing quantum device development.
Contribution
It introduces pump-probe ESR atomic force microscopy for single molecules, enabling long coherence times and atomic-level discrimination of molecular spins.
Findings
Achieved sub-nanoelectronvolt energy resolution in ESR spectra.
Demonstrated coherent manipulation of molecular spins over tens of microseconds.
Enabled local discrimination of isotopically different molecules.
Abstract
Understanding and controlling decoherence in open quantum systems is of fundamental interest in science, while achieving long coherence times is critical for quantum information processing. Although great progress was made for individual, isolated systems, and electron spin resonance (ESR) of single spins with nanoscale resolution has been demonstrated, the construction of complex solid-state quantum devices requires ultimately controlling the environment down to atomic scales, as potentially enabled by scanning probe microscopy with its atomic and molecular characterization and manipulation capabilities. Consequently, the recent implementation of ESR in scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) represents a milestone towards this goal and was quickly followed by the demonstration of coherent oscillations, tunable dipolar and exchange couplings and access to nuclear spins with real-space…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMechanical and Optical Resonators · Molecular Junctions and Nanostructures · Force Microscopy Techniques and Applications
