Optically Detected Magnetic Resonance for Selective Imaging of Diamond Nanoparticles
At a Glance
Section titled āAt a Glanceā| Metadata | Details |
|---|---|
| Publication Date | 2017-11-13 |
| Journal | Analytical Chemistry |
| Authors | Margaret E. Robinson, James D. Ng, Huilong Zhang, Joseph T. Buchman, Olga Shenderova |
| Institutions | University of Minnesota, University of WisconsināMadison |
| Citations | 17 |
Abstract
Section titled āAbstractāWhile there is great interest in understanding the fate and transport of nanomaterials in the environment and in biological systems, the detection of nanomaterials in complex matrices by fluorescence methods is complicated by photodegradation, blinking, and the presence of natural organic material and other fluorescent background signals that hamper detection of fluorescent nanomaterials of interest. Optically detected magnetic resonance (ODMR) of nitrogen-vacancy (N<sub>V</sub>) centers in diamond nanoparticles provides a pathway toward background-free fluorescence measurements, as the application of a resonant microwave field can selectively modulate the intensity from N<sub>V</sub> centers in nanodiamonds of various diameters in complex materials systems using on-resonance and off-resonance microwave fields. This work represents the first investigation showing how nanoparticle diameter impacts the N<sub>V</sub> center lifetime and thereby directly impacts the accessible contrast and signal-to-noise ratio when using ODMR to achieve background-free imaging of N<sub>V</sub><sup>-</sup>nanodiamonds in the presence of interfering fluorophores. These results provide new insights that will guide the choice of optimum nanoparticle size and methodology for background-free imaging and sensing applications, while also providing a model system to explore the fate and transport of nanomaterials in the environment.