The invention related to the field of gyroscopes, and in particular a quantum-based gyroscope that provides a sensitive and stable three-axis gyroscope in the solid state.
Conventional commercial gyroscopes are built using microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) technology that allows for sensitivities exceeding 3 (mdeg s−1)/√{square root over (Hz)} in a hundreds of micron-sized footprint. Despite several advantages—including low current drives (˜100 μA) and large bandwidths (200 deg/s)—that have allowed MEMS gyroscopes to gain ubiquitous usage, they suffer from one critical drawback: The sensitivity drifts after a few minutes of operation, making them unattractive for geodetic applications. The intrinsic reason for these drifts formation of charged asperities at the surface of the capacitive transduction mechanism is endemic to MEMS but does not occur in other systems used as gyroscopes, such as atom interferometers or nuclear spins. However, to achieve sensitivities comparable to MEMS, these systems require large volumes (˜cm3), long startup times, and large power and space overheads for excitation and detection.
According to one aspect of the invention, there is provided an n-NV-based gyroscope. The n-NV-based gyroscope includes a diamond structure implanted with a plurality of Nitrogen-Vacancy defect color centers in diamond (NV centers), whose nuclear spins form a spin gyroscope. A number of radio-frequency (rf) coils and microwave (μw) co-planar waveguides are fabricated on the diamond structure to provide a sensitive and stable three-axis gyroscope in the solid state while achieving gyroscopic sensitivity by exploiting the coherence time of the 14N nuclear spin associated with the NV centers in the diamond structure combined with the efficient optical polarization and measurement of electronic spin.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of implementing a quantum sensor. The method includes implanting a plurality of NV centers in a diamond structure, whose nuclear spins form a spin gyroscope. Moreover, the method includes fabricating a plurality of radio-frequency (rf) coils and microwave (μw) co-planar waveguides on the diamond structure to provide a sensitive and stable three-axis gyroscope in the solid state while achieving gyroscopic sensitivity by exploiting the coherence time of the 14N nuclear spin associated with the NV centers in the diamond structure combined with the efficient optical polarization and measurement of electronic spin.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a quantum sensor. The quantum sensor includes a diamond structure implanted with a plurality of NV centers, whose nuclear spins form a spin gyroscope. A number of radio-frequency (rf) coils and microwave (μw) co-planar waveguides are fabricated on the diamond structure to provide a sensitive and stable three-axis gyroscope in the solid state while achieving gyroscopic sensitivity by exploiting the coherence time of the 14N nuclear spin associated with the NV centers in the diamond structure combined with the efficient optical polarization and measurement of electronic spin.
The invention overcomes the drawbacks of current gyroscopes by using a solid-slate spin associated with the nuclear spin of nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in diamond as a gyroscope (referred herein as n-NV gyro). The n-NV gyro combines the efficient optical initialization and measurement offered by the NV-electronic spin with the stability and long coherence time of the nuclear spin, which is preserved even at high densities.
The operating principles are based on the detection of the phase that the nitrogen-14 nuclear spin 1 (14N) acquires when it rotates around its symmetry axis. Consider an isolated spin 1 with Hamiltonian H0=QI2+γNbIZ, where Q is the intrinsic quadrupolar interaction (Q=−4.95 MHz for the NV center's 14N), b is a small magnetic field, γNb<<Q, and γN=2π×3.1 MHz/T is the 14N gyromagnetic ratio. The spin is subject to rf fields in the transverse plane at frequency Q and with a (gated) amplitude 2ωrf(t). The diamond rotates around the spin-symmetry axis (z axis) at a rate Ω with respect to the frame in which the rf field is applied. Thus, the driving field is described by the Hamiltonian Hrf=2ωrf(t)cos(Qt)└Ix cos(Ωt)−Iy sin(Ωt)┘. One can describe the spin evolution in the interaction frame set by (QIx2−ΩIZ). The second term (e−iΩI
2ωrf cos(Qt)Ix=ωrf└e−iQI
In a Ramsey sequence shown in
Although certain NMR-gyroscope designs use optical pumping for spin polarization the n-NV gyro exploits the unique properties of the NV electron spin for optical polarization and readout of the nuclear spins, achieving far better efficiencies, close to 100%. Furthermore, using a solid-state system allows the application of control fields in the same reference frame of the sensor spins, which, as shown below, decouple the spins from low-frequency noise sources, such as temperature fluctuations, stray magnetic fields, and strains. Stated equivalently, whereas NMR gyros are limited by the dephasing time T*2 the spins, the n-NV gyro is limited by the much longer coherence time T2.
Consider first the operation of a one-axis n-NV gyro. The nuclear spin is first initialized by polarization transfer from the electronic NV spin. Under optical excitation, the electronic ms=±1 levels follow a non-spin-preserving transition through metastable levels down to the ms=0 ground state, yielding high polarization of the electronic spin. The polarization can be transferred to the nuclear spin exploiting the hyperfine coupling A=2.2 MHz in the electron-nuclear-spin Hamiltonian,
H
en
=ΔS
z
2+γebSz+QIz2+(Ω+γNb)Iz+A{right arrow over (S)}·{right arrow over (I)} (2)
where γe=2.8 MHz/G is the electronic gyromagnetic ratio and Δ=2.87 GHz is the zero-field splitting.
Several techniques for polarization transfer have been implemented experimentally, including measurement post selection and exploiting a level anticrossing in the orbital excited state at b˜500 G (using an adiabatic passage or the resonance between the nuclear and the electronic spins). Unfortunately, all these techniques have drawbacks that make them unsuitable for purposes of the invention. The first technique is too lengthy, whereas the second prevents the use of repeated readouts and requires precise alignment of a large static magnetic field. At low field, polarization transfer between the electronic and the nuclear spins is complicated by the fact that both are spin 1.
Unlike for spin 1/2, polarization transfer in the rotating frame (under the Hartmann-Hahn-matching condition) does not lead to perfect polarization, unless the electronic spin is reduced to an effective spin 1/2. Instead, the invention proposes using forbidden two-photon transitions to achieve population transfer. Driving the NV-electronic spin at the Δ±γeb+Q transitions with a field along its longitudinal (z) axis modulates its resonance frequency, thus, making energy exchange with the nuclear spin possible.
Although the transition rates are usually small, the ability to drive the NV-electronic spin with very high fields makes the polarization time
short. For a Rabi frequency=500 MHz and a field b=20 G, the time required is only 1.3 μs. This initialization time is far shorter than for other gyroscope types, including the few tens of milliseconds of startup time required for MEMS gyroscopes.
For ease of operation, one can assume that the rf and μw pulses used for initialization and readout can be delivered by an on-chip circuit, integrated with the diamond. After preparation, the NV-electronic spin is left in the |0 state, which does not couple to the 14N nuclear spin nor to the spin bath. A Ramsey sequence is applied using the off-chip rf driving, thus, inducing accumulation of a rotation-dependent phase [Eq. (1)]. A 2π pulse at the center of the sequence, applied with the on-chip rf field, refocuses the effects of stray magnetic fields and provides decoupling from the spin bath. The sensor spin coherence time is limited by T2 (and not by the shorter dephasing time T*2), which can be exceptionally long for nuclear spins. Thus, the additional pulse, made possible by working with a solid-state device, is critical in making the n-NV gyro immune to a host of low-frequency drifts that limit the operational time of other gyroscope types.
Moreover, since the echo refocuses the coupling to other electronic spins, the n-NV gyro can operate at very high densities of the sensor spins. Ion implantation can reach an NV density of n-NV˜1018 cm−3. Even assuming a density of residual single-nitrogen defects (P1 centers) nP1≈10 n-NV˜1019 cm−3, the N T2 time is not appreciably affected by the P1 bath. Indeed, while at these densities, the dipole-dipole interaction
among P1 centers is large (dP1,P1˜3 MHz with γP1=γe), and the coupling to the nuclear spin is still small, dP1,N˜345 Hz (where the mean-spin-spin distance is estimated as r=3√{square root over (ln(8)/(4π·np1))}{square root over (ln(8)/(4π·np1))}). This leads to motional narrowing and a very slow exponential decay as confirmed by simulations.
The N coherence time is also affected by the interaction with the close-by NV center, which induces dephasing when undergoing relaxation with T1˜2-6 ms at room temperature and low field. Whereas, in high-purity diamonds, the dephasing time T*2 can be as long as 7 ms, in the proposed conditions of operation, one can conservatively estimate the coherence time of the nuclear spin to be T2=1 ms. The echo sequence has the added benefit to make the measurement insensitive to many other imperfections, such as temperature variation, strain, background stray fields, variation in the quadrupolar interaction, and instability in the applied bias magnetic field. Thus, this scheme yields a solid-state gyroscope with stability comparable to that achieved in atomic systems.
After the sensing sequence, the 14N spin is left in the state,
which can be mapped into a population difference between the NV levels thanks to the hyperfine coupling (here, one only considers the longitudinal component of the isotropic hyperfine interaction AIzSz because of the large zero-field splitting Δ).
The readout sequence, as shown in
|ψen½sin(Ωt)[eiΩt(|−1,−1+|+1,−1)+e−iΩt(|+1,+1+|−1,+1)−cos(Ωt)|0,0)] (4)
where |m2S,mzI indicates an eigenstate of Sz and Iz for the electronic and nuclear spins, respectively. The time required to map the state onto the NV center is tmap=230 ns, which is close to the T*2 time for the NV at high densities, thus, one can expect a reduction in contrast. Indeed, it is the NV dephasing time that ultimately limits the allowed spin densities. A possible solution would be to perform a spin echo on both nuclear and electronic spins to extend the coherence time.
Optical readout extracts the information about the rotation Ω. The measurement step can be repeated to improve the contrast. Although, at low field, the nuclear-spin relaxation time under optical illumination is relatively short, thus, limiting the number of repeated readouts when combined with a side-collection scheme giving high collection efficiency ηm≈1, one can still achieve a detection efficiency of C˜0.25 for nr=100 repetitions and a total readout time of tro≈150 μs. The higher detection efficiency will also allow a large dynamic range by exploiting adaptive phase-estimation schemes.
One can now consider the performance of the n-NV-gyroscope design with respect to sensitivity and stability and its potential advantages over competing technologies.
The sensitivity per unit time η is ideally shot-noise limited: η∝1√{square root over (tN)}, where N is the number of nitrogen nuclear spins associated with NV centers in the diamond chip. The expected sensitivity can be estimated by limiting the interrogation time t to T2 and taking into consideration the preparation and readout dead times td tpol+tro and the detection efficiency C,
For a volume V=1 mm3, containing N=n-NVV/4≈2.5×1014 sensor spins along the rotation axis, the estimated sensitivity for the n-NV gyro is then η≈0.5 (mdegs−1)/√{square root over (Hz)}, better than the current MEMS gyroscopes, although in a slightly larger volume, as shown in
More importantly, the stability of the n-NV gyro can be much higher than for MEMS and can be comparable to atomic gyroscopes, shown in
The NV center in diamond includes a substitutional nitrogen adjacent to a vacancy in the lattice. The nitrogen to-vacancy axis sets the direction of the electronic zero-field splitting and nuclear quadrupolar interaction. The axis can be along any of the four tetrahedral 1,1,1 crystallographic directions of the diamond lattice. This intrinsic symmetry can be exploited to operate the n-NV gyro as a three-axis gyroscope, extracting information about the rotation rate as well as its direction.
Although the maximum sensitivity is achieved for rotations aligned with the symmetry axis, if the rotation is about an axis forming an angle {θ,φ} with respect to the NV axis, the 14N still undergoes a complex evolution that depends on {right arrow over (Ω)}. The two rf pulses in the Ramsey interferometry scheme differ not only by their phase ψ1,2 in the NV x-y plane, but also by their flip angle α1,2. If one can assume the first pulse to be along the x axis for the first NV class, the second rf pulse is rotated by an angle ψ1,2=ψ(θ,φ,Ωt) in the NV x-y plane with
The flip angle α1,2=α(θ,φ,Ωt) is also reduced with respect to the nominal angle π,
The state at the end of the Ramsey sequence is then given by
from which one can extract information about the rotation rate Ω. Similar expressions hold for the other NV classes if it is possible to drive excitation fields in the transverse plane of each family. Then, the angles α2c, ψ2c are different for each family of NVs, and measuring the signal from three families allows extracting information about {right arrow over (Ω)}.
Assuming that the driving field is applied only along one direction for all the four NV classes, even the first excitation pulse angles {ψ1c, α1c} differ for each class, whereas, for the second pulse, {ψ2c, α2c} depend not only on the class, but also on the rotation vector {right arrow over (Ω)} via simple trigonometric relationships. The signal for each class is defined as,
S
c=[cos(α1c/2)cos(α2c/2)−sin(α1c/2)sin(α2c/2)cos(ψ1c−ψ2c)]2 (8)
which is shown in
The invention proposes a solid-state device able to measure rotation rates with a resolution of η0.5 (mdegs−1)/√{square root over (Hz)} in a 1-mm3 package while providing great stability. The device performance compares favorably with respect to other current. Even smaller devices—on the micron scale—could be useful by exploiting this long-time stability to improve the performance of the MEMS gyroscope in a combinatoric device, as shown in
In particular,
A rotation out of the plane causes a decrease in the gap near the sense electrodes 36, leading to a capacitive measurement of the rotation. Combinatoric filtering with the n-NV measurement leads to noise rejection and improved stability. High-performance MEMS gyroscopes can be fabricated in diamond using reactive ion-etching tools. While the substrate itself acts as a mechanical gyroscope, the nuclear spins inside it act as a spin gyroscope. These two gyroscopes, employing complementary physical effects, are sensitive to different sources of noise, which can be corrected by Kalman-filter techniques. The integrated device would offer both stability and sensitivity in a small package.
The invention introduces a quantum sensor that provides a sensitive and stable three-axis gyroscope in the solid state. One can achieve high sensitivity by exploiting the long coherence time of the 14N nuclear spin associated with the nitrogen-vacancy center in diamond, combined with the efficient polarization and measurement of its electronic spin. Although the gyroscope is based on a simple Ramsey interferometry scheme, one can use coherent control of the quantum sensor to improve its coherence time and robustness against long-time drifts. Such a sensor can achieve a sensitivity of η˜0.5 (mdeg s−1)/√{square root over (Hzmm3)} while offering enhanced stability in a small footprint. In addition, we exploit the four axes of delocalization of the nitrogen-vacancy center to measure not only the rate of rotation, but also its direction, thus obtaining a compact three-axis gyroscope.
Although the present invention has been shown and described with respect to several preferred embodiments thereof, various changes, omissions and additions to the form and detail thereof, may be made therein, without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
This invention was made with government support under Contract No. W911NF-11-1-0400 awarded by the Army Research Office. The government has certain rights in the invention