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Dive into the research topics where Stephen DeVience is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephen DeVience.


Nature | 2013

Optical magnetic imaging of living cells

D. Le Sage; Ken Arai; David R. Glenn; Stephen DeVience; Linh Pham; Lilah Rahn-Lee; Mikhail D. Lukin; Amir Yacoby; Arash Komeili; Ronald L. Walsworth

Magnetic imaging is a powerful tool for probing biological and physical systems. However, existing techniques either have poor spatial resolution compared to optical microscopy and are hence not generally applicable to imaging of sub-cellular structure (for example, magnetic resonance imaging), or entail operating conditions that preclude application to living biological samples while providing submicrometre resolution (for example, scanning superconducting quantum interference device microscopy, electron holography and magnetic resonance force microscopy). Here we demonstrate magnetic imaging of living cells (magnetotactic bacteria) under ambient laboratory conditions and with sub-cellular spatial resolution (400 nanometres), using an optically detected magnetic field imaging array consisting of a nanometre-scale layer of nitrogen–vacancy colour centres implanted at the surface of a diamond chip. With the bacteria placed on the diamond surface, we optically probe the nitrogen–vacancy quantum spin states and rapidly reconstruct images of the vector components of the magnetic field created by chains of magnetic nanoparticles (magnetosomes) produced in the bacteria. We also spatially correlate these magnetic field maps with optical images acquired in the same apparatus. Wide-field microscopy allows parallel optical and magnetic imaging of multiple cells in a population with submicrometre resolution and a field of view in excess of 100 micrometres. Scanning electron microscope images of the bacteria confirm that the correlated optical and magnetic images can be used to locate and characterize the magnetosomes in each bacterium. Our results provide a new capability for imaging bio-magnetic structures in living cells under ambient conditions with high spatial resolution, and will enable the mapping of a wide range of magnetic signals within cells and cellular networks.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2015

Nanoscale NMR spectroscopy and imaging of multiple nuclear species

Stephen DeVience; Linh Pham; Igor Lovchinsky; Alexander Sushkov; Nir Bar-Gill; Chinmay Belthangady; Francesco Casola; Madeleine Corbett; Huiliang Zhang; Mikhail D. Lukin; Hongkun Park; Amir Yacoby; Ronald L. Walsworth

Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) provide non-invasive information about multiple nuclear species in bulk matter, with wide-ranging applications from basic physics and chemistry to biomedical imaging. However, the spatial resolution of conventional NMR and MRI is limited to several micrometres even at large magnetic fields (>1 T), which is inadequate for many frontier scientific applications such as single-molecule NMR spectroscopy and in vivo MRI of individual biological cells. A promising approach for nanoscale NMR and MRI exploits optical measurements of nitrogen-vacancy (NV) colour centres in diamond, which provide a combination of magnetic field sensitivity and nanoscale spatial resolution unmatched by any existing technology, while operating under ambient conditions in a robust, solid-state system. Recently, single, shallow NV centres were used to demonstrate NMR of nanoscale ensembles of proton spins, consisting of a statistical polarization equivalent to ∼100-1,000 spins in uniform samples covering the surface of a bulk diamond chip. Here, we realize nanoscale NMR spectroscopy and MRI of multiple nuclear species ((1)H, (19)F, (31)P) in non-uniform (spatially structured) samples under ambient conditions and at moderate magnetic fields (∼20 mT) using two complementary sensor modalities.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Preparation of Nuclear Spin Singlet States Using Spin-Lock Induced Crossing

Stephen DeVience; Ronald L. Walsworth; Matthew S. Rosen

We introduce a broadly applicable technique to create nuclear spin singlet states in organic molecules and other many-atom systems. We employ a novel pulse sequence to produce a spin-lock induced crossing (SLIC) of the spin singlet and triplet energy levels, which enables triplet-singlet polarization transfer and singlet-state preparation. We demonstrate the utility of the SLIC method by producing a long-lived nuclear spin singlet state on two strongly coupled proton pairs in the tripeptide molecule phenylalanine-glycine-glycine dissolved in D(2)O and by using SLIC to measure the J couplings, chemical shift differences, and singlet lifetimes of the proton pairs. We show that SLIC is more efficient at creating nearly equivalent nuclear spin singlet states than previous pulse sequence techniques, especially when triplet-singlet polarization transfer occurs on the same time scale as spin-lattice relaxation.


NMR in Biomedicine | 2013

NUCLEAR SPIN SINGLET STATES AS A CONTRAST MECHANISM FOR NMR SPECTROSCOPY

Stephen DeVience; Ronald L. Walsworth; Matthew S. Rosen

Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra of complex chemical mixtures often contain unresolved or hidden spectral components, especially when strong background signals overlap weaker peaks. In this article we demonstrate a quantum filter utilizing nuclear spin singlet states, which allows undesired NMR spectral background to be removed and target spectral peaks to be uncovered. The quantum filter is implemented by creating a nuclear spin singlet state with spin quantum numbers j = 0, mz = 0 in a target molecule, applying a continuous RF field to both preserve the singlet state and saturate the magnetization of undesired molecules and then mapping the target molecule singlet state back into an NMR observable state so that its spectrum can be read out unambiguously. The preparation of the target singlet state can be carefully controlled with pulse sequence parameters, so that spectral contrast can be achieved between molecules with very similar structures. We name this NMR contrast mechanism ‘Suppression of Undesired Chemicals using Contrast‐Enhancing Singlet States’ (SUCCESS) and we demonstrate it in vitro for three target molecules relevant to neuroscience: aspartate, threonine and glutamine. Copyright


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2012

Dependence of nuclear spin singlet lifetimes on RF spin-locking power

Stephen DeVience; Ronald L. Walsworth; Matthew S. Rosen

We measure the lifetime of long-lived nuclear spin singlet states as a function of the strength of the RF spin-locking field and present a simple theoretical model that agrees well with our measurements, including the low-RF-power regime. We also measure the lifetime of a long-lived coherence between singlet and triplet states that does not require a spin-locking field for preservation. Our results indicate that for many molecules, singlet states can be created using weak RF spin-locking fields: more than two orders of magnitude lower RF power than in previous studies. Our findings suggest that for many endogenous biomolecules, singlets and related states with enhanced lifetimes might be achievable in vivo with safe levels of RF power.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2016

Probing scalar coupling differences via long-lived singlet states

Stephen DeVience; Ronald L. Walsworth; Matthew S. Rosen

We probe small scalar coupling differences via the coherent interactions between two nuclear spin singlet states in organic molecules. We show that the spin-lock induced crossing (SLIC) technique enables the coherent transfer of singlet order between one spin pair and another. The transfer is mediated by the difference in syn and anti vicinal or long-range J couplings among the spins. By measuring the transfer rate, we calculate a J coupling difference of 8±2mHz in phenylalanine-glycine-glycine and 2.57±0.04Hz in glutamate. We also characterize a coherence between two singlet states in glutamate, which may enable the creation of a long-lived quantum memory.


Biophysical Journal | 2012

Minimalist Model for Force-Dependent DNA Replication

Eva X. Nong; Stephen DeVience; Dudley R. Herschbach


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015

Fourier magnetic imaging with nanoscale resolution and compressed sensing speed-up using electronic spins in diamond

Keigo Arai; Chinmay Belthangady; Huiliang Zhang; Stephen DeVience; Nir Bar-Gill; Paola Cappellaro; Amir Yacoby; Ronald L. Walsworth


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2014

Nanoscale NMR Spectroscopy and Imaging of Multiple Nuclear Species

Linh Pham; Stephen DeVience; Nir Bar-Gill; Chinmay Belthangady; Francesco Casola; Madeleine Corbett; Huiliang Zhang; Paola Cappellaro; Mikhail D. Lukin; Hongkun Park; Amir Yacoby; Ronald L. Walsworth


Biophysical Journal | 2013

Wide-Field Magnetic Imaging using Nitrogen-Vacancy Color Centers in Diamond

Keigo Arai; David Le Sage; Stephen DeVience; David R. Glenn; Linh Pham; Lilah Rahn-Lee; Mikhail D. Lukin; Amir Yacoby; Arash Komeili; Ronald L. Walsworth

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Nir Bar-Gill

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Keigo Arai

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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