From diamond defects to protein-based qubit sensors

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Event details

Date 15.07.2025
Hour 14:0015:00
Speaker Peter Maurer is an Assistant Professor at the University of Chicago. Peter received his PhD from Harvard, where he worked with Misha Lukin on NV centers in diamond. One of the projects Peter led as a graduate student was the development of a diamond nano-thermometer, which enabled measurements of temperature profiles in living cells. The idea of utilizing quantum sensors to probe and manipulate biological systems has motivated Peter to complete his postdoctoral training with Steven Chu at Stanford, where he developed luminescent nano-probes for electron microscopy. Now at the University of Chicago, Peter is combining the tools of quantum engineering, biophysics, and materials engineering that he learned during his PhD and postdoctoral training to develop biocompatible quantum sensing tools and apply them to real-world problems in the life sciences. 
Location
Category Conferences - Seminars
Event Language English
Quantum metrology enables some of the world's most sensitive measurements with potentially far-reaching applications in the life sciences. Although the ultrahigh sensitivity of qubit sensors has sparked the imagination of researchers, implementing them in actual devices that enable monitoring cellular processes or detecting diseases remains largely elusive. Overcoming the limitations that hinder the broader application of quantum technology in the life sciences requires advances in both fundamental science and engineering. In this talk, I will discuss new strategies that combine quantum engineering and molecular biology to develop a new generation of quantum sensors that can be readily integrated with biological systems. My discussion will start with the development of a novel biocompatible surface functionalization architecture for highly coherent diamond crystals. I will then continue with discussing a new approach to engineering spin coherence in core-shell structured diamond particles, which can be readily chemically modified and delivered to intact biological systems. Finally, I will depart from established diamond sensors and introduce an entirely new class of biological qubits based on optically-addressable spins in fluorescent proteins. These protein-qubits have coherence times and optical readout comparable to solid-state defects, but are only 3 nm in diameter and genetically encodable. The unifying theme of these advances is the convergence of techniques from quantum engineering and molecular biology. Specific applications of the developed sensing platforms to questions in the life sciences will be discussed throughout this talk.

Practical information

  • Informed public
  • Free

Organizer

  • Eveline Mayner, Professor Aleksandra Radenovic

Contact

  • eveline.mayner@epfl.ch

Tags

quantum sensing NV centers qubits fluorescent proteins

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