Time-resolved diamond magnetic microscopy of superparamagnetic iron-oxide nanoparticles
B. A. Richards, N. Ristoff, J. Smits, A. Jeronimo Perez, I. Fescenko,, M. D. Aiello, F. Hubert, Y. Silani, N. Mosavian, M. Saleh Ziabari, A., Berzins, J. T. Damron, P. Kehayias, D. Egbebunmi, J. E. Shield, D. L. Huber,, A. M. Mounce, M. P. Lilly, T. Karaulanov, A. Jarmola

TL;DR
This study uses diamond-based magnetic microscopy to analyze individual superparamagnetic iron-oxide nanoparticles, revealing heterogeneity in their magnetic properties and relaxation dynamics with high temporal resolution.
Contribution
First application of time-resolved diamond magnetic microscopy to characterize magnetic heterogeneity and relaxation in individual SPIONs.
Findings
Most SPIONs show negligible hysteresis.
SPIONs exhibit a sharp Langevin saturation curve.
Néel relaxation times vary from milliseconds to seconds.
Abstract
Superparamagnetic iron-oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs) are promising probes for biomedical imaging, but the heterogeneity of their magnetic properties is difficult to characterize with existing methods. Here, we perform widefield imaging of the stray magnetic fields produced by hundreds of isolated ~30-nm SPIONs using a magnetic microscope based on nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond. By analyzing the SPION magnetic field patterns as a function of applied magnetic field, we observe substantial field-dependent transverse magnetization components that are typically obscured with ensemble characterization methods. We find negligible hysteresis in each of the three magnetization components for nearly all SPIONs in our sample. Most SPIONs exhibit a sharp Langevin saturation curve, enumerated by a characteristic polarizing applied field, B_c. The B_c distribution is highly asymmetric, with a…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
