20260304 邀请报告 斯图加特大学第三物理研究所 彭若酩博士
发布人:中科院微观磁共振重点实验室  发布时间:2026-03-02   动态浏览次数:10

报告时间:20263414:3016:00

报告地点:物质科研楼A309会议室   Room A309 Material Science Building

报告人: 彭若酩博士斯图加特大学第三物理研究所

 

报告题目/Title: Quantum Sensing of Quantum Matter at Surfaces

 

摘要/Abstract:

Electromagnetic interaction underlies emergent phases in solid-state systems, from magnetism and superconductivity to topological order. Yet probing these interactions at the nanoscale remains a major challenge for conventional techniques. In this talk, I’ll introduce the quantum sensing architecture we have developed by combining a quantum spin defect, a single NV center in diamond, with scanning probe microscopy. This approach offers ~30 nm spatial resolution and 1 µT/√Hz magnetic-field sensitivity, enabling us to probe local magnetic dynamics in quantum materials. As examples, I’ll first show how nanoscale quantum sensing reveals the super-Moiré magnetic order emerging in twisted antiferromagnets. By extending the sensor’s dynamic range through qubit coherence control, we can also access time-dependent behavior in 2D superconductors, where vortices remain mobile even far below the critical temperature. Looking ahead, I’ll discuss our recent progress toward a better quantum sensor by interfacing molecules with 2D materials. Here, we demonstrated the first optically addressable spin qubits at surfaces, that mitigate the dephasing common to near-surface defects, enabling direct NMR detection of protons and magnetic sensing of 2D materials.  Together, I hope to convey a perspective on how quantum sensing can transform our ability to visualize, understand, and ultimately engineer quantum matter at surfaces.

 

报告人简介/Curriculum Vitae:

Dr. Ruoming Peng obtained his Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering from the University of Washington in 2022. He worked with Prof. Mo Li and studied exciton physics in 2D nanophotonic devices. After graduation, Ruoming spent a short period as the Kananoff-Rice postdoc fellow at the University of Chicago and then moved to the 3rd Institute of Physics at the University of Stuttgart under the supervision of Prof. Joerg Wrachtrup. Ruoming has developed strong expertise in 2D optical spectroscopy and quantum sensing. He is currently managing the scanning probe subgroup at the 3rd Institute of Physics and working on scanning quantum microscopy for emergent condensed matter phenomena.