Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tabatabaei, Sahand, Priyadarsi, Pritam, Tay, Daniel, Singh, Namanish, Sahafi, Pardis, Jordan, Andrew, Budakian, Raffi
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.04708
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Table of Contents:
  • Quantum sensors based on individual spins provide unprecedented access to local magnetic fields in condensed matter, chemistry, and biology, with solid-state defect spins emerging as the leading platform. However, their molecular-sensing capabilities are limited by confinement to a host lattice, which prevents placement in close proximity to a target molecule. Molecular spins offer an alternative, enabling chemical tunability and flexible positioning relative to the target system. Here we present a nanoscale sensing platform that combines molecular electron spins, ultrasensitive mechanical readout, and Hamiltonian engineering. Using a modified XYXY dipolar decoupling sequence, we suppress electron-electron dipolar interactions across a broad distribution of control fields, extending coherence times to $\sim 400~μ$s in an attoliter-scale droplet containing $\sim$100 trityl-OX063 radicals. Leveraging this sequence, we demonstrate frequency-selective detection of nanotesla-scale AC fields and perform sensing and spectroscopy of small, local nuclear-spin ensembles. Collectively, these results establish SQUINT (Spin-based QUantum Integrated Nanomechanical Transduction) as a framework for quantum sensing that affords molecular-level control over sensor properties and enables direct integration into complex molecular targets.