Q-BiC: A biocompatible integrated chip for in vitro and in vivo spin-based quantum sensing
Louise Shanahan, Sophia Belser, Jack W. Hart, Qiushi Gu, Julien R. E. Roth, Annika Mechnich, Michael Hoegen, Soham Pal, David Jordan, Eric A. Miska, Mete Atature, Helena S. Knowles

TL;DR
The paper introduces Q-BiC, a biocompatible chip enabling non-damaging, in vivo and in vitro quantum sensing using spin-based sensors, overcoming key technical challenges in biological environments.
Contribution
Development of Q-BiC, a biocompatible integrated chip that allows microwave delivery and temperature control for in vivo and in vitro quantum sensing.
Findings
Q-BiC enables magnetic resonance in living cells and organisms.
Microwave exposure within safe ranges does not harm biological systems.
Nanoscale thermometry performed with minimal stress on organisms.
Abstract
Optically addressable spin-based quantum sensors enable nanoscale measurements of temperature, magnetic field, pH, and other physical properties of a system. Advancing the sensors beyond proof-of-principle demonstrations in living cells and multicellular organisms towards reliable, damage-free quantum sensing poses three distinct technical challenges. First, spin-based quantum sensing requires optical accessibility and microwave delivery. Second, any microelectronics must be biocompatible and designed for imaging living specimens. Third, efficient microwave delivery and temperature control are essential to reduce unwanted heating and to maintain an optimal biological environment. Here, we present the Quantum Biosensing Chip (Q-BiC), which facilitates microfluidic-compatible microwave delivery and includes on-chip temperature control. We demonstrate the use of Q-BiC in conjunction with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElectrochemical sensors and biosensors
