A Ramsey Ion Gradiometer for Single-Molecule State Detection
Sean D. Huver

TL;DR
This paper proposes a quantum sensing device called the Quantum Ligand-Binding Interrogator (QLI) that can detect single-molecule ligand-receptor interactions without labels, using ion-based gradiometry in a vitrified sample environment.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel quantum sensor architecture capable of label-free, single-molecule detection of electrostatic changes associated with ligand binding.
Findings
Projected SNR=1 in tens of seconds at 10 μm separation
Feasibility depends on electrostatic stability of vitrified samples
Utilizes entangled two-ion spin states for measurement
Abstract
The characterization of ligand--receptor interactions is a cornerstone of modern pharmacology; however, current methods are hampered by limitations such as ensemble averaging and invasive labeling. We propose a theoretical quantum sensing solution, the Quantum Ligand-Binding Interrogator (QLI), designed to overcome these challenges. The QLI is a differential sensor, or gradiometer, that uses a pair of co-trapped atomic ions to perform label-free detection of the electric field gradient produced by a single ligand binding to its receptor in vitrified samples. This gradiometric approach provides robust common-mode rejection of background electric field noise. To bridge the gap between the cryogenic, ultra-high-vacuum environment required for the sensor and the biological sample, we propose an architecture based on a vitrified sample mounted on a scanning probe. This enables the detection…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnalytical Chemistry and Sensors · Electrochemical Analysis and Applications · Electrochemical sensors and biosensors
