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Home»News»Nanodiamonds in water droplets boost quantum sensing precision
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Nanodiamonds in water droplets boost quantum sensing precision

March 15, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
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Nanodiamonds in water droplets boost quantum sensing precision
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Researchers developed a method to detect small amounts of certain chemicals by adding nanodiamonds to microdroplets. Credit: Ajoy Lab/UC Berkeley

Combine a garden-variety green laser, microwaves with roughly the energy of your wi-fi, and some diamond dust in drops of water, and what do you get? A precise chemical detection tool.

For the first time, researchers have combined nanodiamonds in microdroplets of liquid for quantum sensing. The new technique is precise, fast, sensitive, and requires only small amounts of the material to be studied—helpful when studying trace chemicals or individual cells. The results were published in the journal Science Advances in December.

“We weren’t even sure whether our technique would work, but it turned out to be surprisingly easy and effective,” said Ashok Ajoy, a faculty scientist in the Chemical Sciences Division at the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and assistant professor at UC Berkeley who led the project. “There are broad applications where these sensors could be deployed into interesting environments and help you find something that would usually be hard to detect.”

Quantum sensing takes advantage of unique properties that emerge at the smallest scales. In their new method, researchers make a series of microdroplets that are millions of times smaller than a raindrop. These are filled with a special kind of diamond where some of the carbon atoms are removed and nitrogen atoms are added.

These “nitrogen vacancies” act as quantum sensors and give the nanodiamonds a special property: as the droplets flow past a laser and are hit by microwaves, the nanodiamonds give off light. The amount of light in the presence of a microwave field is related to the materials around the nanodiamond, letting the researchers determine whether a chemical of interest is nearby.

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In this slowed down video, microdroplets filled with nanodiamonds flow through different structures in the team’s device. The droplets are generated and spaced out. Their contents mix as they travel through loops until they are deposited in a storage chamber. Credit: Ajoy Lab/UC Berkeley

The combination of flowing droplets and carefully modulated microwaves lets researchers ignore unwanted background noise and adds to their precision. When it comes to detecting trace amounts of slightly magnetic (or “paramagnetic”) chemicals in small sample volumes, the new flowing nanodiamond approach is already outperforming leading techniques.

(If you’re thinking that science has spared no expense, don’t fear—researchers can analyze hundreds of thousands of droplets for about 63 cents of diamond dust, making it both a relatively inexpensive and effective option.)

Small sensors, big applications

With further development, there are many potential ways to use the nanodiamonds in droplets.

In the new study, a team of researchers headed by UC Berkeley and Berkeley Lab graduate student Adrisha Sarkar and Berkeley Lab postdoc Zack Jones successfully showed they could pick up trace amounts of two paramagnetic species: gadolinium ions and TEMPOL, a stable radical molecule that is sensitive to oxygen.







Nanodiamonds fluoresce, or give off light, as the droplets flow past the microwave source. Credit: Ajoy Lab/UC Berkeley

Several other kinds of paramagnetic ions are of interest, but difficult to study using traditional techniques. Such is the case for reactive oxygen species (ROS), short-lived molecules of oxygen that have been linked to cell metabolism, aging, and stress. The new technique could prove a better way to detect reactive oxygen within single cells, giving experts a way to track cell health, with implications for studying diseases such as cancer. The team is already preparing for such a study.

They’re also looking at how to attach additional components that aid in identification (such as antibodies) to the nanodiamonds, expanding the tool for biological research. One can imagine using the technique to build better diagnostic tests to identify viruses when only trace amounts of the virus are present.

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Or, because the method is relatively low-tech, Ajoy foresees a portable system that could be used to monitor the air or water for harmful trace contaminants and chemicals, either in the field or in industrial settings. Because the nanodiamond microdroplets are cheap and plentiful, the technique could be scaled up to measure hundreds of different samples with great sensitivity and address complex, real-world problems.







From revolutionary advances in fuels to everyday products like cosmetics, bioreactors are at the forefront of science discoveries. Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Biofuels and Bioproducts Process Development Unit is starting to explore self-driving bioreactors. Learn how they plan to advance the future of bioreactors with autonomous systems, equipped with AI-microscopy and advanced quantum sensors. Credit: Jenny Nuss/Berkeley Lab

The new approach could also be useful for creating self-driving bioreactors of the future. Bioreactors create controlled environments for growing microorganisms that can make medicines, biofuels, or food ingredients. Because each droplet of nanodiamonds can act as a microscopic “beaker” and can hold a single cell, researchers could potentially use the technique to tune bioreactors.

“You can envision setting up bioreactors in austere environments around the world or in space, to make things like food that you couldn’t deliver on a daily basis,” said Deepti Tanjore, director of the Advanced Biofuels and Bioproducts Process Development Unit at Berkeley Lab. “Having precise quantum sensors that tell you how the microorganism culture is behaving is an important step toward that dream. To build a self-regulating bioreactor, we need that real-time intracellular data.”

The work brought together experts in chemistry, microfluidics, biosciences, and Earth sciences.

Provided by
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory



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