It was known to sense electron spin orientation using electron spin resonance spectroscopy (ESR). Electron spin resonance spectroscopy is based on the fact that when electrons are exposed to a magnetic field, the magnetic field creates a difference in the energy level between different spin states. For many spin species, the relationship between the difference in the energy levels of the different spin states is linearly proportional to the strength B0 of the magnetic field, such as illustrated in
In a typical electron resonance spectrometer, schematized at
Turning now to
It will be understood that with an electron resonance spectrometer such as shown in
In practice, transversal coupling occurs between the spins and the electromagnetic waves in the cavity, and as long as the conditions are close to the spin transition frequency, the electron spins will enter a resonance condition with the cavity where they exchange energy with the cavity field and the cavity frequency will shift depending on the spin state. This can allow a narrowband scanning along excitation frequency, schematized by the fact that short oblique lines, rather than spots, are illustrated in the different resonant cavity “windows” illustrated in the graph of
This limited amount of information was found useful to a certain degree. Indeed, in many cases, one can expect certain “signatures” to be present in association with given electron spin species associated with given samples, in a context where the relationship between the transition condition, frequency and magnetic field strength of such electron spin species have already been characterized. Such signatures can be in the form of intensity dips or changes in phase associated to specific magnetic field strengths. There nonetheless remained room for improvement.
The development of quantum technologies has accelerated in recent years and is expected to continue in years to come. With it comes a need to characterize spin species and spin excitations in many new quantum materials which have not yet been characterized, providing significant challenges for current-day technology. Indeed, some spin species in such quantum materials do not have a linear magnetic field strength vs. frequency relationship, such as schematized in
A new technique was developed which, in at least some embodiments, now allows scanning materials along a wider band of the frequency axis. This new technique is based on the fact that transitions of spin in a sample can produce a change in the magnetic field generated by the sample. It was discovered that such changes in the magnetic field could, depending on the spin state, increase or decrease the electrical inductance in a superconducting (also referred to as supra conducting) element when the superconducting element was exposed to the magnetic field of the spin species and exhibited a high kinetic inductance. This “longitudinal” coupling can produce measurable effects on the phase and/or amplitude of electromagnetic waves conveyed in the superconducting element, which could be detected as a source of information on spin states.
This new technique can perform satisfactorily when it is executed while applying a magnetic field with a main component oriented in the kinetic inductance plane of the sensing surface of the superconducting element, and a minor component normal to the kinetic inductance plane. The spin transition could still be triggered using electromagnetic radiation, and the superconducting element could be a resonator, for instance, but the new technique does not require the spin transition to be at the resonance frequency of the superconducting resonator, opening the door to wideband frequency scanning at a fixed magnetic field.
A simplified block diagram of a system of sensing electron spin based on this principle is shown in
It was found that such a system could operate dominantly via the longitudinal coupling principle, as opposed to the transversal coupling principle which was dominant in an electron resonance spectrometer such as schematized in
It was found relevant in many cases to use relatively large strengths of magnetic field to create sizeable gaps between different spin energy levels. On the other hand, while it was found relevant to have at least a portion of the magnetic field oriented normal to the kinetic inductance plane to achieve the longitudinal coupling effect, and while increasing the strength of the magnetic field normal to the kinetic inductance plane had the effect of increasing sensitivity to a certain extent, increasing the amplitude of the magnetic field normal to the kinetic inductance plane (hereinafter: transverse magnetic field) past a certain point could be counter-productive. Firstly, one must take into consideration the critical magnetic field strength of the superconducting element, past which the element will no longer exhibit superconductivity. In addition, for a superconducting resonator, past a certain threshold, the resonator frequency tends towards 0 and may become too low to be detectable. It can therefore be preferred to keep the strength of the transverse magnetic field below such a threshold. The thresholds beyond which such counter-productive effects begin to occur can vary based on various factors associated with the specific superconducting element selected for a given application.
In accordance with one aspect, there is provided a system for sensing spin transitions in a sample, the system comprising: a magnetic field generator configured to generate a difference of energy level between different spin states in the sample, an electromagnetic radiation source configured to induce a spin transition in the sample based on the difference in energy between the different spin states; a superconducting element configured to exhibit kinetic inductance and having a sensing surface exposable to the magnetic field of the spins in the sample in a manner for the spin transition to cause, via the kinetic inductance, a change in electromagnetic waves carried by the superconducting element; and a detector configured to detect the change in the electromagnetic waves.
In accordance with another aspect, there is provided a method of sensing a magnetic field of a sample, said method comprising; exposing a sensing surface of a superconducting element to the magnetic field of the sample, said superconducting element having a perpendicular magnetic field threshold, exposing the sensing surface to a magnetic field having a component normal to the sensing surface being lesser than the perpendicular magnetic field threshold; longitudinally coupling the magnetic field of the sample to electromagnetic waves carried by the superconducting element via the kinetic inductance; and sensing a value indicative of at least one of phase and amplitude of the electromagnetic waves.
In accordance with another aspect, there is provided a method of sensing spin orientation in a sample, the method comprising generating a magnetic field causing an energy difference between different spin states in the sample, triggering spin transition in the sample by exposing the sample to electromagnetic radiation of frequency corresponding to the difference in energy between the different spin states; exposing a sensing surface of a superconducting element to a magnetic field of the spins in the sample, the spin transition causing, via the kinetic inductance, a change in the electromagnetic waves carried by the superconducting element; and detecting the change using a detector.
In accordance with another aspect, there is provided a method of sensing spin orientation in a sample, the method comprising generating a magnetic field causing an energy difference between different spin states in the sample, triggering spin transition in the sample by exposing the sample to electromagnetic radiation of frequency corresponding to the difference in energy between the different spin states; exposing a sensing surface of a superconducting element to a magnetic field of the spins in the sample, the inversion of electron spin orientation causing, via kinetic inductance, a change in electromagnetic waves carried by the superconducting element; and detecting the change using a detector.
In accordance with still another aspect, the sensitivity to out-of-plane magnetic fields of the frequency of a superconducting resonator with a high kinetic inductance is used to measure the spin state, therefore realizing a quantum nondemolition readout of the spin system through an effective longitudinal coupling. This measurement technique for spin systems can be compatible with circuit QED architectures and could be used as an alternative to techniques based on transversal coupling in a wide range of applications.
Many further features and combinations thereof concerning the present improvements will appear to those skilled in the art following a reading of the instant disclosure.
In the figures,
It was found that the magnetic field of spins can be longitudinally coupled to a high kinetic inductance resonator and directly influence its resonance frequency. Explanations of this phenomenon will follow, but the case of a conventional spin resonator system will first be explored.
Conventional ESR
In a conventional spin-resonator system, the fundamental mode of a λ/2 coplanar waveguide resonator of angular frequency ωr is described by the Hamiltonian
v-hωvâ†âl (1)
where a(a†″) is the annihilation (creation) operator of a single photon in the resonator. A single spin Ŝ in an external magnetic field B0 can be described by the Hamiltonian
Ĥs-g″μBB0·Ŝ+Ĥs′, (2)
where g″ is the Landé factor and μB is the Bohr magneton. While the first term of Eq. (2) simply describes the Zeeman effect, Ĥs′ describes, for example, a zero-field splitting. In the spin eigenbasis, the Hamiltonian is given generally by
For a spin Ŝ at a position r from the central conductor of the resonator, a magnetic-dipole interaction will develop due to the resonator vacuum fluctuations. The interaction Hamiltonian is then
ĤintX-g″μB(a†+â)δB(r)·Ŝr (4)
where δB(r) is the rms-amplitude of the magnetic field fluctuations at the spin position. If a spin transition of angular frequency ωij-ωj-ωt is near resonance with the resonator angular frequency ωI, i.e. ωji≈ωr, energy exchange between the spin and the resonator occurs and the spin state is not conserved. This type of interaction is transverse as it does not commute with the spin Hamiltonian.
In the spin eigenbasis, the system Hamiltonian can be expressed as
after performing the rotating-wave approximation. The coupling strength gij of the resonator-induced transition |i|j is given by
hgij=g*μBδB(r)·i|Ŝ|j. (6)
Far from resonance when |ωij-ωy|, the system enters the so-called dispersive regime where energy exchange is inhibited and the resonator acquires a spin-dependant frequency shift. This situation is similar to the dispersive shift between a transmon-type superconducting qubit and a microwave resonator, for example. Readout of the spin state can be made simply by measuring the amplitude and/or phase of a signal at the resonator frequency. While a full dispersive Hamiltonian could be obtained for all possible inter-level spin transitions, here we restrict our analysis on nearest level transitions where l-l±1. In this simpler case, the system Hamiltonian of Eq. (5) is well approximated by the dispersive Hamiltonian d given by
The off-resonant transverse interaction effectively pulls the resonator angular frequency by a spin-dependent shift given by
where Δij-ωij-ωy is the angular frequency detuning between the |i|j spin transition and resonator angular frequencies. In particular, the resonator angular frequency difference resulting from the first spin transition |g|e is given by (with g=1, e=2)
For negative detunings (Δge<0) and assuming that the |g|e transition is further from resonance, (|Δge|<|Δef|) then the observed resonator angular frequency change is negative, i.e. Δωv<0.
For an ensemble of N degenerate spins, single excitations correspond to collective spin excitations in the spin ensemble. Considering their relative position from the center conductor, the average coupling strength is given by
The coupling strength with the spin ensemble is enhanced by a factor √{square root over (N)} due to the collective nature of the spin excitations in the ensemble. The system Hamiltonian is therefore well described by taking gij→
However, given the strong dependence of the dispersive shift with the detuning, spin detection with the dispersive shift can only be done if the spin transition frequencies lie in the vicinity of the resonator frequency, typical ESR detection experiments rely on narrowband ˜100 MHz detectors where the resonator is tailored for each specific types of spin transitions in a given sample.
Longitudinal Coupling—Theoretical Description
One way to overcome the limited bandwidth for the detection of spins is to make the resonator sensitive to the field fluctuations generated by the spin ensemble. To achieve this, a spin ensemble can be placed on top of a high-kinetic inductance resonator having a frequency sensitive to an applied magnetic field perpendicular to the kinetic inductance plane due to the nonlinear Meissner effect. In the presence of a spin ensemble, the resonator frequency will shift by a spin-dependent value which does not depend explicitly on the spin-resonator detuning. This interaction is longitudinal by contrast with the transverse interaction scheme referred to above.
In a specific embodiment, a uniform magnetic field bias B0 is applied on the system in the [X, Y, X] laboratory frame, with the resonator being in the YZ-plane. Due to the nonlinear Meissner effect, the frequency of the high-kinetic inductance resonator depends quadratically with the perpendicular component of the magnetic field B0X according to
where a-LK/(Lm+LK′) is the ratio between the kinetic inductance affected by the magnetic field, LK, and the total resonator inductance Lm+LK. Here Bm is the characteristic threshold magnetic field for which the resonator angular frequency reaches zero, i.e. ωv(Bm′)→0.
The magnetic field dependence of the frequency allows for the resonator to become highly sensitive to the quantum fluctuations provided by the spin ensemble. To illustrate the mechanism, consider a single spin in state |i placed directly on top of the resonator. The perpendicular component of the magnetic field fluctuations applies to the resonator is then given by
ΔBX(r)=BX(r)i|ŜX|i (12)
where ŜX is the projection of the spin operator along the X axis. The amplitude of the magnetic field fluctuations perpendicular to the kinetic inductance plane for a single spin at position r is given by
with μ0 being the vacuum permeability and η(r) is a geometrical form factor.
As illustrated in
Where a′=aδA/Ar represents the kinetic inductance ratio that is affected by the spin covering a surface area δA above the resonator surface of total area Ar.
In a general setting where the transverse spin-resonator interaction is also present in the dispersive regime, the Hamiltonian of a spin coupled to a high-kinetic inductance resonator is then given by
Due the impinging magnetic fluctuations, the spin affects the resonator frequency with a spin-dependent quantity ∝δi|ii|. Given that the field amplitude in Eq. (13) scales as η(r)˜1/|r|8 and decreases rapidly with the distance, the spin affects the resonator only locally over a surface of area δA. In proportion and for a resonator with total surface area Ar, the kinetic inductance affected by the spin fluctuations will scale as lK′˜lKδA/Av.
As we can see in Eq. (14), êl is independent from the spin-resonator detuning contrary to the dispersive shift given by Eq. (8) resulting from an off-resonant transverse interaction. Since there is no preferable spin-transition frequency for detection, the longitudinal interaction allows for detection of spins over a broad frequency range limited only by the excitation frequency bandwidth. Indeed, the measurement bandwidth is fixed by the resonator frequency, not the frequencies of the spin transitions. Furthermore, this detection scheme is insensitive to parallel magnetic fields.
Extending to an ensemble of N degenerate spins, the collective excitations are distributed within the volume. Assuming that the distance between the ensemble and the resonator is much smaller than the ensemble dimensions, the field fluctuations of the ensemble are uniform and Eq. (12) remains valid. Hence, a single excitation radiates a magnetic field through an area δA→AN on the resonator.
By defining the average magnetic field fluctuations on the resonator δ
and from Eq. (14), produces an average shift δl per spin. The frequency shift corresponding to a collective excitation in a spin ensemble is therefore enhanced by a factor N. Thus, a high-kinetic inductance resonator coupled to a spin ensemble will have an angular frequency shift between states |g and |e given by
Δωv-√{square root over (N)}(
where Xi is the average dispersive shift caused by the average transverse coupling
Longitudinal Coupling—the Specific Case of NV Centers
While the coupling scheme described can be applicable to any type of magnetic moment, we will now focus on one possible example for the purpose of demonstration. As shown in
NV-gxμBB0·
The first term describes the Zeeman splitting where g″≈2. The second term of Eq. (18) describes a zero-field splitting with D/2π˜2.87 GHz that lifts the degeneracy between the |ms=0and |ms=±1 spin states at zero field. A strain-induced splitting furthermore lifts the degeneracy between the |ms-±1> spin states at zero field with E/2π˜5 MHz. Here Ŝ-(Ŝx, Ŝy, Ŝz) represents the Pauli matrices for a spin S=1.
The system of coordinates [x,v,z] is defined such that z points along the quantization axis of the NV center at zero magnetic field. Due to the crystalline symmetry, there are four equivalent crystallographic orientations of NV centers: [
The Hamiltonian of Eq. (18) can be diagonalized for an arbitrary external magnetic field B0. The diagonalized free spin Hamiltonian is therefore
with transition frequencies ωij-ωj-ωi for l>l. In particular, for a magnetic field along the Z axis, all four NV center orientations are affected in the same way by the magnetic field and their eigenfrequencies are degenerate. The presence of finite angles θ0 (φ0) around the Y (X) axis in the external magnetic field lifts the degeneracy between the four orientations (
Longitudinal Coupling—Experimental Proof with NV Centers
A summary of the experimental setup used as a proof-of-concept to detect the presence of spins using the longitudinal coupling between a spin ensemble and a resonator will now be presented, with additional details on the sample parameters and measurement techniques provided further below.
The superconducting resonator consists of a 6 mm long coplanar waveguide resonator fabricated from a 18 nm thick niobium film on a insulating GaAs substrate with a impedance of Z=97Ω. A CVD diamond sample with dimensions (0.3×1.5×1.5 mm3) and containing of the order of 1015 NV centers per cm3 is placed on top of the high-kinetic inductance resonator and fixed in place by vacuum grease (
Three distinct experiments are made. In a first experiment, the resonator is measured in a perpendicular magnetic field, corresponding to θ0-90°. This allows us to determine the characteristic magnetic field Bm, which is required to estimate the magnetic field sensitivity. In a second experiment, the spectroscopy of the spin transitions of NV centers is carried by sweeping the amplitude of the magnetic field. Both the transverse and longitudinal couplings contribute to the signal. The angles θ0 and φ0 between the external magnetic field and the plane of the resonator are fixed to θ0-0.48° and φ0-−1.46° as later determined through spectroscopy of the NV centers. Finally, in a third experiment, the frequencies of the spin transitions of NV centers are fixed at larger detuning values to further suppress the dispersive coupling. Additionally, the angles θ0 and φ0 can be changed in situ by using a vector magnet. More specifically, this enables us to change the perpendicular bias field E0X. At this detuning, the signal from the longitudinal coupling is dominant.
We characterize the high-kinetic inductance resonator without the presence of the diamond by measuring the resonator spectrum. With the frequency of the resonator extrapolated at zero temperature and from the waveguide geometry, we estimate the kinetic inductance participation ratio a-0.71, indicative of a high-kinetic inductance resonator (see further below). The measured resonator linewidth of η/2π≈0.86 MHz indicates that the resonator is undercoupled, as external and internal losses due to the GaAs substrate are estimated as approximately equal. Adding the diamond and grease decrease the resonator frequency from ωv/2π≈5.115 GHz to 4.984 GHz while the relaxation rate increases only slightly to η/2π≈0.97 MHz due to additional internal losses.
In the first experiment, the resonator frequency dependence is calibrated in a perpendicular external magnetic field along the X axis B0=B0XeX. In
A consequence of such a sensitivity can be observed in the hysteresis of the resonance frequency caused by nearby vortices in the sample. In addition, we see that as we increase the magnetic field, the fluctuations of the resonance frequency become larger as indicated by the error bars, as expected from an increase of the kinetic inductance with B0X. Considering that we can estimate the resonator frequency with a sensitivity of 0.9 kHz/√{square root over (Hz)} for a spectroscopy power P6=−87 dBm≈2 pW, the magnetic field sensitivity around B0X≈0.5 mT is approximately 20 nT/√{square root over (Hz)}. This is a simple lower-bound estimate assuming that the magnetic field sensitivity is constant since in reality it increases with the perpendicular magnetic field, leading to a better sensitivity.
In a second experiment, to confirm the presence of a transverse interaction between the NV centers and the resonator, the resonator spectrum is measured as a function of a mostly in-plane magnetic field B0 with angles θ0-0.48° and φ0-−1,46° (
After demonstrating a spin-resonator transverse coupling, the dispersive regime where the spin transition frequency is far detuned from the resonator frequency preventing the exchange of energy, as discussed earlier, will now be explored. Still, the transverse coupling allows for a strong pump tone of angular frequency ωy≈ωij to drive spin transitions between states |i and |j through the resonator. The pump tone changes the populations of the different eigenstates |j−{g, e, f}) of the NV centers and can therefore be used to change the magnetization of the spin ensemble.
To perform an off-resonance readout of the NV centers, we first prepare a steady-state of the ensemble with a finite population in states |e or |f using a continuous pump tone around ωy≈ωge or ωgf. After a few seconds, the pump angular frequency is switched to a reference angular frequency ωga, chosen such that it is off-resonant with any spin transitions. During that time, a spectroscopy tone at angular frequency ωs measures the resonator angular frequency as a function of the time t, ωy(t). During this free evolution, the NV centers excited state population decays to the ground state |g as with a relaxation time constant T1 which can reach many hours at millikelvin temperatures. Due to the dispersive and/or longitudinal interaction with the resonator (see Eq. (17)), the decaying spin population will produce a transient signal in ωr(t).
In
δωy(t′)-Δωve−t/T
with an amplitude Δωy and a decay time constant T1. Fitting data shown in
In
In
To further demonstrate the presence of the longitudinal spin-resonator interaction scheme,
Using the same set of parameters, the longitudinal coupling with the |g|ƒ transition in
In the third experiment, the device is placed in a dilution refrigerator with a vector magnet. There, the in-plane magnetic field is kept at a nominally constant values of B0Y-112 mT and B0Z-22 mT, while B0X is swept from 750 μT to −700 μT. The measured resonator frequency shift is shown in
Indeed, by tuning the perpendicular magnetic field from positive to negative values, we directly tune the sensitivity of the resonator while the spin transition frequency is only slightly affected. In doing so, the detuning is kept almost constant so the dispersive shift from the transverse interaction remains almost unchanged and negative throughout. The longitudinal shift, however, is directly proportional to E0X and therefore must change sign across B0X-0 and can overcome the residual dispersive shift. Our theoretical simulations also support our claim as the resonator shift calculated from the system Hamiltonian Eq. (15), shown in
Theoretical calculations for high-kinetic inductance superconducting resonators
We consider a λ/2 coplanar waveguide resonator defined in superconducting niobium film of thickness d with a central conductor of width w spaced from the ground plane by a spacing of width s. The impedance Z and the angular frequency ωr of the fundamental mode of the resonator are given by
where r is the length of the resonator, Lm is the geometrical inductance per unit length and C is the capacitance per unit length. The kinetic inductance per unit length LK is given by
where λ is the penetration depth of the superconducting film and g(w,s,t′) is a geometrical factor.
The kinetic inductance depends on the ratio of λ2 and the area wt of the cross-section of the central conductor. The penetration depth λ depends on the temperature T and the amplitude of the perpendicular magnetic field B0X. Furthermore, we empirically find that, at zero temperature, the penetration depth depends on the thickness d of the niobium film according to
where λL is the London penetration depth. The thickness-dependent penetration depth λ(d) obtained experimentally for different superconducting niobium resonators is fitted to Eq. (23) to determine λL=49±2 nm, very close to the bulk value of niobium of λL-39 nm (
Additional details about experimental setup
The r=6 mm long resonator used in the experiment presented above is fabricated from a d-18 nm thick niobium film on an insulating GaAs substrate. The central conductor width and spacing are nominally w-10 μm and s-6.8 μm respectively, corresponding to a characteristic impedance Z=97Ω. From the resonator frequency wv/2π-5.12% GHz extrapolated at zero temperature, the penetration depth λ-122 nm and the kinetic inductance ratio a-0.71 are determined. The input and output coupling capacitors to coplanar waveguides lead to external coupling rates of Kin,out/2π≈0.21 MHz. Furthermore, internal losses of the resonator of ηint/2π=0.43 MHz at zero field are limited by dielectric losses from the GaAs substrate. The total linewidth η/2π=(ηin+ηout+ηint)/2π≈0.86 Mhz.
The high concentration of NV centers is obtained by implanting a CVD diamond sample (0.3×1.5×1.5 mm3) from Element6™ with less than 1 ppm of nitrogen and a typical NV centers density of 2×1018 NV/cm3. Following implantation with protons at 10 MeV (dose of 4×1010 ions/cm2), the sample is thermal annealed at 800° C. for 2 hours and 1000° C. for another 2 hours under an argon atmosphere to allow vacancies to migrate and form additional NV centers. Based on photoluminescence measurements, we estimate that the implantation and annealing steps increase the density of NV centers by a factor of 108.
The diamond is fixed at the surface of the resonator with vacuum grease (
The magnetic field fluctuations produced by a single spin Ŝ are given by
where S=i|Ŝ|i denotes the expectation value of a given spin state.
The magnetic field fluctuations perpendicular to the kinetic inductance plane are then given by δBX(r)=B(r)·eX where eX is the unit vector normal to the kinetic inductance plane, i.e. along the X axis (
δBX(r)=βX(r)ŜX+βy(r)ŜY+βZ(r)ŜZ) (25)
For any given position r, δBX(r) will have contributions not only from ŜX, as discussed in the main text, but from ŜY and ŜZ as well.
The perpendicular magnetic field δBX along the resonator underneath the sample can be theoretically estimated by discretizing the sample in unit cells of volume ΔV, each containing an average of n-ρΔV spins. At a position r0 from the center of the resonator, the perpendicular component of the magnetic field of a unit cell at a position r is n×δBX(r-r0). Summing over all unit cells allows of obtain the perpendicular component of the total field produced by the spin ensemble at a specific position Z along the resonator.
From our simulations we can also estimate the sample volume that influences most of the resonator by calculating the field contribution βX while shrinking the sample size along all three directions (not shown). We estimate the dominant field comes from a sample volume of (0.06×0.03×1.50) mm3 above the resonator, corresponding to 1/250 of the total ensemble and to ˜5×1010 spins.
As can be understood, the examples described above and illustrated are intended to be exemplary only. For instance, in the detailed example presented above, the superconducting element used is a superconducting resonator, and more specifically a superconducting coplanar waveguide resonator. Depending on the embodiment, it may be preferred to detect the change in the spin state by sensing a change of amplitude, or by sensing a change of phase in the transmitted and/or reflected electromagnetic waves for instance. In alternate embodiments, other types of resonators can be used, such as a lumped element or a microstrip for instance. Moreover, in theory, it appears possible to use a waveguide guiding electromagnetic waves in transmission, such as a microwave signal for instance, rather than a resonator. Changes in the magnetic field stemming from spin transitions in the sample may likely cause a change of impedance in the waveguide which may be detected in the form of changes in phase and/or amplitude of the electromagnetic waves travelling in the waveguide. Moreover, while a typical embodiment will use a variable frequency source of electromagnetic radiation, distinct from the source of energy which generates the electromagnetic waves conveyed by the superconducting element, to allow scanning the sample in frequency for electron spin transitions in addition to scanning in magnetic field strength, it is not to be excluded that in some embodiments, it may nonetheless be preferred to use a non-variable frequency source for stimulating spin transitions, and perhaps use the same source of electromagnetic radiation for simultaneously stimulating the spin transitions and driving the electromagnetic waves in the superconducting element. Moreover, it will be noted that in alternate embodiments, the orientation of the magnetic field relative to the kinetic inductance plane can vary, and the amplitude of the magnetic field strength oriented normal to the kinetic inductance plane can vary greatly depending on the perpendicular magnetic field threshold at which the specific superconducting element stops being superconducting, or whose resonating frequency tends towards zero, for instance. In the example presented above, the perpendicular magnetic field threshold was around 8 mT, but this threshold will vary depending on the specificities of the superconducting element and design of alternate embodiments. In the context of the sensitivity of the equipment in the example presented above, it was preferred to apply a magnetic field component normal to the kinetic inductance plane of at least 0.1 mT, preferably at least 0.25 mT, but it will be understood that in alternate embodiments, the strength of the magnetic field normal to the kinetic inductance plane may be satisfactorily below 0.1 mT, if sufficient sensitivity is achieved. Moreover, in some embodiments, it may not be required to apply an external magnetic field normal to the kinetic inductance plane, such as in cases where the magnetic field of the sample is sufficient, for instance. In particular, in alternate embodiments, it can be desired to use a superconducting element which has a magnetic field threshold as high as possible, with all other relevant variables being equal, and to increase the amount of magnetic field strength oriented normal to the kinetic inductance plane to the extent permitted by the associated threshold. It will also be reiterated that longitudinal coupling between spins and a superconducting element exhibiting kinetic inductance is not limited to electron spins, and can be harnessed with other types of spins. For instance, rather than being harnessed for sensing electron spin, the longitudinal coupling can be likely be harnessed for sensing atomic nuclei spin, spin waves, or spin qubits. The transition in spin is not necessarily a complete inversion between states of opposite spin orientations; other changes in spin may also be detectable. Accordingly, the scope is indicated by the appended claims.
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PCT/CA2019/051056 | 8/1/2019 | WO | 00 |
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WO2020/028976 | 2/13/2020 | WO | A |
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20080272775 | Feng | Nov 2008 | A1 |
20170214410 | Hincks | Jul 2017 | A1 |
20190018078 | Nelson | Jan 2019 | A1 |
20190277842 | Cleveveland et al. | Sep 2019 | A1 |
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0296833 | Dec 1988 | EP |
2016139419 | Dec 2016 | WO |
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Bulletin of the American Physical Society—APS March Meeting 2018—Monday-Friday, Mar. 5-9, 2018; Los Angeles, California—Session L55: Quantum Dot/Microwave Photon Entanglement—Abaraham Asfaw—http://meetings.aps.org/Meeting/MAR18/Session/L55.7 [retrieved from Internet Jul. 19, 2018]. |
SKIFFS: Superconducting Kinetic Inductance Filed-Frequency Sensors for Sensitive Magnetometry in Moderate Background Magnetic Fileds—A. T. Asfaw et al.—Department of Electrical Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, 08544, USA—Dated Jul. 27, 2018. |
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