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Dive into the research topics where Fazhan Shi is active.

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Featured researches published by Fazhan Shi.


Science | 2015

Single-protein spin resonance spectroscopy under ambient conditions

Fazhan Shi; Qi Zhang; Pengfei Wang; Hongbin Sun; J. B. Wang; Xing Rong; Ming Chen; Chenyong Ju; Friedemann Reinhard; Hongwei Chen; Jörg Wrachtrup; Junfeng Wang; Jiangfeng Du

Single-protein spectroscopy The spin of a single nitrogen-vacancy (NV) center in diamond is a highly sensitive magnetic-field sensor. Shi et al. used the NV center to detect a nitroxidelabeled protein through electron spin resonance under ambient conditions (see the Perspective by Hemmer and Gomes). The strength of the interaction and the details of the hyperfine interaction between the electron and nitrogen spin revealed the position and orientation of the spin label relative to the NV center. The findings also elucidate the dynamical motions of the protein on the diamond surface. Science, this issue p. 1135; see also p. 1072 Electron spin resonance (ESR) signals from a single labeled protein were detected with diamond nitrogen-vacancy centers. [Also see Perspective by Hemmer and Gomes] Magnetic resonance is essential in revealing the structure and dynamics of biomolecules. However, measuring the magnetic resonance spectrum of single biomolecules has remained an elusive goal. We demonstrate the detection of the electron spin resonance signal from a single spin-labeled protein under ambient conditions. As a sensor, we use a single nitrogen vacancy center in bulk diamond in close proximity to the protein. We measure the orientation of the spin label at the protein and detect the impact of protein motion on the spin label dynamics. In addition, we coherently drive the spin at the protein, which is a prerequisite for studies involving polarization of nuclear spins of the protein or detailed structure analysis of the protein itself.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Room-Temperature Implementation of the Deutsch-Jozsa Algorithm with a Single Electronic Spin in Diamond

Fazhan Shi; Xing Rong; Nanyang Xu; Ya Wang; Jie Wu; Bo Chong; Xinhua Peng; Juliane Kniepert; Rolf-Simon Schoenfeld; Wolfgang Harneit; Mang Feng; Jiangfeng Du

The nitrogen-vacancy defect center (N-V center) is a promising candidate for quantum information processing due to the possibility of coherent manipulation of individual spins in the absence of the cryogenic requirement. We report a room-temperature implementation of the Deutsch-Jozsa algorithm by encoding both a qubit and an auxiliary state in the electron spin of a single N-V center. By thus exploiting the specific S=1 character of the spin system, we demonstrate how even scarce quantum resources can be used for test-bed experiments on the way towards a large-scale quantum computing architecture.


Nature Physics | 2014

Sensing and atomic-scale structure analysis of single nuclear-spin clusters in diamond

Fazhan Shi; Xi Kong; Pengfei Wang; Fei Kong; Nan Zhao; Ren-Bao Liu; Jiangfeng Du

Being able to sense nuclear spin dimers is an important next step towards single-molecule structural analysis from NMR measurements. Now the sensing of a single 13C–13C nuclear spin dimer near a nitrogen–vacancy centre in diamond is reported, together with a structural characterization at atomic-scale resolution.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Coherence-protected quantum gate by continuous dynamical decoupling in diamond.

Xiangkun Xu; Z. M. Wang; Changkui Duan; Pu Huang; Pengfei Wang; Ya Wang; Nanyang Xu; Xi Kong; Fazhan Shi; Xing Rong; Jiangfeng Du

In order to achieve reliable quantum-information processing results, we need to protect quantum gates along with the qubits from decoherence. Here we demonstrate experimentally on a nitrogen-vacancy system that by using a continuous-wave dynamical decoupling method, we might not only prolong the coherence time by about 20 times but also protect the quantum gates for the duration of the controlling time. This protocol shares the merits of retaining the superiority of prolonging the coherence time and at the same time easily combining with quantum logic tasks. This method can be useful in tasks where the duration of quantum controlling exceeds far beyond the dephasing time.


Nature Communications | 2011

Observation of an anomalous decoherence effect in a quantum bath at room temperature

Pu Huang; Xi Kong; Nan Zhao; Fazhan Shi; Pengfei Wang; Xing Rong; Ren-Bao Liu; Jiangfeng Du

The decoherence of quantum objects is a critical issue in quantum science and technology. It is generally believed that stronger noise causes faster decoherence. Strikingly, recent theoretical work suggests that under certain conditions, the opposite is true for spins in quantum baths. Here we report an experimental observation of an anomalous decoherence effect for the electron spin-1 of a nitrogen-vacancy centre in high-purity diamond at room temperature. We demonstrate that, under dynamical decoupling, the double-transition can have longer coherence time than the single-transition even though the former couples to the nuclear spin bath as twice strongly as the latter does. The excellent agreement between the experimental and theoretical results confirms the controllability of the weakly coupled nuclear spins in the bath, which is useful in quantum information processing and quantum metrology.


Nature Communications | 2015

Experimental fault tolerant universal quantum gates with solid-state spins under ambient conditions.

Xing Rong; Jianpei Geng; Fazhan Shi; Ying Liu; Kebiao Xu; Wenchao Ma; Fei Kong; Zhen Jiang; Yang Wu; Jiangfeng Du

Quantum computation provides great speedup over its classical counterpart for certain problems. One of the key challenges for quantum computation is to realize precise control of the quantum system in the presence of noise. Control of the spin-qubits in solids with the accuracy required by fault-tolerant quantum computation under ambient conditions remains elusive. Here, we quantitatively characterize the source of noise during quantum gate operation and demonstrate strategies to suppress the effect of these. A universal set of logic gates in a nitrogen-vacancy centre in diamond are reported with an average single-qubit gate fidelity of 0.999952 and two-qubit gate fidelity of 0.992. These high control fidelities have been achieved at room temperature in naturally abundant 13C diamond via composite pulses and an optimized control method.


Nature Communications | 2015

High-resolution vector microwave magnetometry based on solid-state spins in diamond

Pengfei Wang; Zhenheng Yuan; Pu Huang; Xing Rong; Mengqi Wang; Xiangkun Xu; Changkui Duan; Chenyong Ju; Fazhan Shi; Jiangfeng Du

The measurement of the microwave field is crucial for many developments in microwave technology and related applications. However, measuring microwave fields with high sensitivity and spatial resolution under ambient conditions remains elusive. In this work, we propose and experimentally demonstrate a scheme to measure both the strength and orientation of the microwave magnetic field by utilizing the quantum coherent dynamics of nitrogen vacancy centres in diamond. An angular resolution of 5.7 mrad and a sensitivity of 1.0 μT Hz−1/2 are achieved at a microwave frequency of 2.6000 GHz, and the microwave magnetic field vectors generated by a copper wire are precisely reconstructed. The solid-state microwave magnetometry with high resolution and wide frequency range that can work under ambient conditions proposed here enables unique potential applications over other state-of-art microwave magnetometry.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Observation of time-domain Rabi oscillations in the Landau-Zener regime with a single electronic spin.

Jingwei Zhou; Pu Huang; Qi Zhang; Z. M. Wang; Tian Tan; Xiangkun Xu; Fazhan Shi; Xing Rong; Sahel Ashhab; Jiangfeng Du

It is theoretically known that the quantum interference of a long sequence of Landau-Zener transitions can result in Rabi oscillations. Because of its stringent requirements, however, this phenomenon has never been experimentally observed in the time domain. Using a nitrogen-vacancy (NV) center spin in isotopically purified diamond, we observed the Rabi oscillations resulting from more than 100 Landau-Zener processes. Our results demonstrate favorable quantum controllability of NV centers, which could find applications in quantum metrology and quantum information processing.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Implementation of dynamically corrected gates on a single electron spin in diamond.

Xing Rong; Jianpei Geng; Z. M. Wang; Qi Zhang; Chenyong Ju; Fazhan Shi; Changkui Duan; Jiangfeng Du

Precise control of an open quantum system is critical to quantum information processing but is challenging due to inevitable interactions between the quantum system and the environment. We demonstrated experimentally a type of dynamically corrected gates using only bounded-strength pulses on the nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond. The infidelity of quantum gates caused by a nuclear-spin bath is reduced from being the second order to the sixth order of the noise-to-control-field ratio, which offers greater efficiency in reducing infidelity. The quantum gates have been protected to the limit essentially set by the spin-lattice relaxation time T1. Our work marks an important step towards fault-tolerant quantum computation in realistic systems.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Direct Measurement of Topological Numbers with Spins in Diamond

Fei Kong; Chenyong Ju; Ying Liu; Chao Lei; Mengqi Wang; Xi Kong; Pengfei Wang; Pu Huang; Zhaokai Li; Fazhan Shi; Liang Jiang; Jiangfeng Du

Topological numbers can characterize the transition between different topological phases, which are not described by Landaus paradigm of symmetry breaking. Since the discovery of the quantum Hall effect, more topological phases have been theoretically predicted and experimentally verified. However, it is still an experimental challenge to directly measure the topological numbers of various predicted topological phases. In this Letter, we demonstrate quantum simulation of topological phase transition of a quantum wire (QW), by precisely modulating the Hamiltonian of a single nitrogen-vacancy (NV) center in diamond. Deploying a quantum algorithm of finding eigenvalues, we reliably extract both the dispersion relations and topological numbers. This method can be further generalized to simulate more complicated topological systems.

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Jiangfeng Du

University of Science and Technology of China

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Xing Rong

University of Science and Technology of China

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Pengfei Wang

University of Science and Technology of China

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Xi Kong

University of Science and Technology of China

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Changkui Duan

University of Science and Technology of China

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Pu Huang

University of Science and Technology of China

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Chenyong Ju

University of Science and Technology of China

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Fei Kong

University of Science and Technology of China

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Jianpei Geng

University of Science and Technology of China

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Qi Zhang

National University of Singapore

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