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High speed microcircuit and synthetic biosignal widefield imaging using nitrogen vacancies in diamond

Authors :
Webb, James L.
Troise, Luca
Hansen, Nikolaj W.
Frellsen, Louise F.
Osterkamp, Christian
Jelezko, Fedor
Jankuhn, Steffen
Meijer, Jan
Berg-Sørensen, Kirstine
Perrier, Jean-François
Huck, Alexander
Andersen, Ulrik Lund
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The ability to measure the passage of electrical current with high spatial and temporal resolution is vital for applications ranging from inspection of microscopic electronic circuits to biosensing. Being able to image such signals passively and remotely at the same time is of high importance, to measure without invasive disruption of the system under study or the signal itself. A new approach to achieve this utilises point defects in solid state materials, in particular nitrogen vacancy (NV) centres in diamond. Acting as a high density array of independent sensors, addressable opto-electronically and highly sensitive to factors including temperature and magnetic field, these are ideally suited to microscopic widefield imaging. In this work we demonstrate such imaging of signals from a microscopic lithographically patterned circuit at the micrometer scale. Using a new type of lock-in amplifier camera, we demonstrate sub-millisecond (up to 3500 frames-per-second) spatially resolved recovery of AC and pulsed electrical current signals, without aliasing or undersampling. Finally, we demonstrate as a proof of principle the recovery of synthetic signals replicating the exact form of signals in a biological neural network: the hippocampus of a mouse.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2107.14156
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevApplied.17.064051