scispace - formally typeset
S

Stephen J. DeVience

Researcher at Harvard University

Publications -  28
Citations -  1560

Stephen J. DeVience is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Singlet state & Diamond. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 27 publications receiving 1267 citations. Previous affiliations of Stephen J. DeVience include University of Maryland, Baltimore & West Virginia University.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Optical magnetic imaging of living cells

TL;DR: This work demonstrates magnetic imaging of living cells (magnetotactic bacteria) under ambient laboratory conditions and with sub-cellular spatial resolution, 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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nanoscale NMR spectroscopy and imaging of multiple nuclear species

TL;DR: Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and MRI of multiple nuclear species are realized in non-uniform samples under ambient conditions and at moderate magnetic fields using two complementary sensor modalities.
Journal ArticleDOI

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

TL;DR: An alternative technique of Fourier magnetic imaging using NV-diamond is introduced, which employs pulsed magnetic field gradients to phase-encode spatial information on NV electronic spins in wavenumber or 'k-space' followed by a fast Fourier transform to yield real-space images with nanoscale resolution, wide field of view and compressed sensing speed-up.
Journal ArticleDOI

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

TL;DR: It is shown 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.