Bottom-Up Synthesis of Molecular Nanodiamond from Nanographene

Nature News ·

Nanodiamonds hosting colour centres are promising building blocks for quantum technologies, enabling advances in quantum computation 1,2 , nanoscale NMR spectroscopy 3–6 , single-spin magnetometry …

Nanodiamonds hosting colour centres are promising building blocks for quantum technologies, enabling advances in quantum computation 1,2 , nanoscale NMR spectroscopy 3–6 , single-spin magnetometry 7,8 , wide-field quantum imaging 9 and single-photon sources 10,11 . However, the controlled bottom-up synthesis of ultrasmall and structurally uniform nanodiamonds has remained a major challenge, with existing methods producing heterogeneous materials that vary in size, morphology, impurity content and defect quality. Here we show that well-defined, hydrogen-terminated molecular nanographenes serve as chemically confined precursors for high-pressure, high-temperature synthesis of ultrasmall (3–4 nm), monodisperse and highly crystalline molecular nanodiamonds (m-NDs) with only a single sp² surface reconstruction and produced on a milligram scale. The same bottom-up platform also enables a two-component strategy for incorporating silicon- and germanium-based colour centres during synthesis, yielding SiV⁻ and GeV⁻ emitters without ion implantation, irradiation or post-treatment. Because the nanographene precursor defines both the confined carbon framework and the hydrogen content, this approach provides intrinsic, precursor-level control over nanodiamond size and composition, particularly in the low-nanometre regime relevant for biological and quantum sensing. …

Original source: Nature News