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1.
J Magn Reson ; 354: 107523, 2023 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37625202

RESUMO

Landau-Zener-Stückelberg-Majorana (LZSM) transitions occur between quantum states when parameters in the system's Hamiltonian are varied continuously and rapidly. In magnetic resonance, losses in adiabatic rapid passage can be understood using the physics of LZSM transitions. Most treatments of LZSM transitions ignore the T2 dephasing of coherences, however. Motivated by ongoing work in magnetic resonance force microscopy, we employ the Bloch equations, coordinate transformation, and the Magnus expansion to derive expressions for the final magnetization following a rapid field sweep at fixed irradiation intensity that include T2 losses. Our derivation introduces an inversion-function, Fourier transform method for numerically evaluating highly oscillatory integrals. Expressions for the final magnetization are given for low and high irradiation intensity, valid in the T2≪T1 limit. Analytical results are compared to numerical simulations and nuclear magnetic resonance experiments. Our relatively straightforward calculation reproduces semiquantitatively the well known LZSM result in the T2→0 limit.

2.
ACS Nano ; 2023 Jan 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36625878

RESUMO

The sensitivity of magnetic resonance force microscopy (MRFM) is limited by surface noise. Coating a thin-film polymer sample with metal has been shown to decrease, by orders of magnitude, sample-related force noise and frequency noise in MRFM experiments. Using both MRFM and inductively detected measurements of electron-spin resonance, we show that thermally evaporating a 12 nm gold layer on a 40 nm nitroxide-doped polystyrene film inactivates the nitroxide spin labels to a depth of 20 nm, making single-spin measurements difficult or impossible. We introduce a "laminated sample" protocol in which the gold layer is first evaporated on a sacrificial polymer. The sample is deposited on the room-temperature gold layer, removed using solvent lift-off, and placed manually on a coplanar waveguide. Electron spin resonance (ESR) of such a laminated sample was detected via MRFM at cryogenic temperatures using a high-compliance cantilever with an integrated 100-nm-scale cobalt tip. A 20-fold increase of spin signal was observed relative to a thin-film sample prepared instead with an evaporated metal coating. The observed signal is still somewhat smaller than expected, and we discuss possible remaining sources of signal loss.

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