Toward liquid cell quantum sensing: Ytterbium complexes with ultranarrow absorption.
Ashley J ShinChangling ZhaoYi ShenClaire E DickersonBarry Yangtao LiHootan RoshandelDaniel BímTimothy L AtallahPaul H OyalaYongjia HeLianne K AlsonTyler A KerrAnastassia N AlexandrovaPaula L DiaconescuWesley C CampbellJustin R CaramPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2024)
The energetic disorder induced by fluctuating liquid environments acts in opposition to the precise control required for coherence-based sensing. Overcoming fluctuations requires a protected quantum subspace that only weakly interacts with the local environment. We report a ytterbium complex that exhibited an ultranarrow absorption linewidth in solution at room temperature with a full width at half maximum of 0.625 milli-electron volts. Using spectral hole burning, we measured an even narrower linewidth of 410 pico-electron volts at 77 kelvin. Narrow linewidths allowed low-field magnetic circular dichroism at room temperature, used to sense Earth-scale magnetic fields. These results demonstrated that ligand protection in lanthanide complexes could substantially diminish electronic state fluctuations. We have termed this system an "atomlike molecular sensor" (ALMS) and proposed approaches to improve its performance.
Keyphrases
- room temperature
- ionic liquid
- solar cells
- energy transfer
- molecular dynamics
- molecularly imprinted
- single molecule
- single cell
- optical coherence tomography
- electron microscopy
- monte carlo
- electron transfer
- binding protein
- magnetic resonance imaging
- mesenchymal stem cells
- metal organic framework
- solid phase extraction
- computed tomography