Macquarie University
researchers have demonstrated how ordinary supermarket grapes can enhance the
performance of quantum sensors, potentially leading to more efficient quantum
technologies.
The study, published in Physical Review Applied on 20 December 2024, shows that pairs of grapes can create strong
localized magnetic field hotspots of microwaves which are used in quantum
sensing applications—a finding that could help develop more compact and
cost-effective quantum devices.
“While previous studies looked at the electrical fields causing the plasma effect, we showed that grape
pairs can also enhance magnetic fields, which are crucial for quantum sensing
applications,” says lead author Ali Fawaz, a quantum physics Ph.D. candidate at
Macquarie University.
The research builds on viral social
media videos showing grapes creating plasma—glowing balls of electrically
charged particles—in microwave ovens.
While previous studies focused on
electric fields, the Macquarie team examined magnetic field effects crucial for
quantum applications.
The team used specialized nano-diamonds
containing nitrogen-vacancy centers—atomic-scale defects that act as quantum
sensors. These defects (one of the many defects giving diamonds their color)
behave like tiny magnets and can detect magnetic fields.
“Pure diamonds are colorless, but when
certain atoms replace the carbon atoms, they can form so-called ‘defect’ centers with optical properties,” says study co-author Dr. Sarath Raman Nair, who is
a lecturer in quantum technology at Macquarie University.
“The nitrogen-vacancy centers in the
nanodiamonds we used in this study act like tiny magnets that we can use for
quantum sensing.”
The team placed their quantum sensor—a
diamond containing special atoms—on the tip of a thin glass fiber and
positioned it between two grapes. By shining green laser light through the
fiber, they could make these atoms glow red. The brightness of this red glow
revealed the strength of the microwave field around the grapes.
“Using this technique, we found the magnetic field of the microwave radiation becomes twice as
strong when we add the grapes,” says Fawaz.
Senior author Professor Thomas Volz, who
heads the Quantum Materials and Applications Group at Macquarie’s School of
Mathematical and Physical Sciences, says the findings unlock exciting
possibilities for quantum technology miniaturization.
“This research opens up another avenue
for exploring alternative microwave resonator designs for quantum technologies,
potentially leading to more compact and efficient quantum sensing devices,” he
says.
The size and shape of the grapes proved
crucial to the experiment’s success. The team’s experiments relied on precisely
sized grapes—each approximately 27 millimeters long—to concentrate microwave
energy at approximately the right frequency of the diamond quantum sensor.
Quantum sensing devices traditionally
use sapphire for this purpose. However, the Macquarie team theorized that water
might work even better. This made grapes, which are mostly water enclosed in a
thin skin, perfect for testing their theory.
“Water is actually better than sapphire
at concentrating microwave energy, but it’s also less stable and loses more
energy in the process. That’s our key challenge to solve,” says Fawaz.
Looking beyond grapes, the researchers
are now developing more reliable materials that could harness water’s unique
properties, bringing us closer to more efficient sensing devices.
Source: https://phys.org/news/2024-12-grapes-math-ordinary-fruit-quantum.html
Journal article: https://journals.aps.org/prapplied/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevApplied.22.064078
Photo:
Photo of the experimental setup to couple MWs to N- 𝑉s using grape dimers. A stripped optical fiber with N- 𝑉 spins, cantilevered from a rod, lies between two grapes. The
grapes were positioned on a platform with a vertical straight copper wire,
equidistant from each grape
Credit: Fawaz, Nair, Volz
Source: Grapes of math: Ordinary fruit enhances performance of quantum sensors – Scents of Science
No comments:
Post a Comment