Overview
This project aims to pioneer quantum sensors based on individual spins in luminescent molecules as a new class of nanoscale probes.
Background & motivation
By leveraging principles such as superposition and entanglement, quantum sensors enable magnetic and electric fields, strain and temperature to be detected with unprecedented sensitivity and spatial resolution. Among quantum-sensing platforms, optically readable electronic spins in solid-state systems have shown remarkable promise [1], enabling magnetic-resonance at the nanoscale, and opening impactful applications across biomedicine, materials science, and quantum technologies. To date, defect-based spins in crystals such as diamond have powerfully led the way but face key challenges in their tunability (i.e., tailoring for a specific sensing application) and proximal integration (i.e., coupling to targets with nanoscale spatial precision).
Quantum sensors from optically interfaced molecular spins
Housing spins in chemically synthesised molecules offers a compelling pathway to overcome these challenges and open unique opportunities for quantum sensing enabled by:
- tunability: chemical systems enable atomistic control over spin and optical properties for specific sensing tasks.
- nanoscale modularity: molecules’ compact (~1 nm) size opens unprecedented proximity to targets such as biological systems.
- versatility: functionalisation and self-assembly open novel routes for deployment.
Objectives
Our work has demonstrated key breakthroughs for molecular spin-based quantum sensing, including effective optical-spin interfaces [Science, 370, 1309 (2020)] [2], room-temperature operation [Phys. Rev. Lett. 133, 120801 (2024)] [3], and chemically enhanced spin readout [J. Am. Chem. Soc., 147, 22911 (2025)] [4]. Building on these demonstrations, this PhD project will push the frontier of molecular quantum sensing through unprecedented single-spin capabilities by:
- Demonstrating measurement and control of single molecular spins for quantum sensing.
- Exploring how molecular tunability can enhance key quantum-sensing metrics.
- Developing unique application use cases leveraging molecular advantages.
Methodology
You will experimentally investigate candidate molecules using techniques such as:
- optically detected electron spin resonance;
- time-correlated single-photon counting;
- cryogenic scanning confocal microscopy;
complementing these with simulations of spin- and -optical dynamics, and analysis of structure-function relationships.
This multidisciplinary work will develop a broad skillset in quantum technologies—including magnetic-resonance based qubit control, quantum optics, molecular-level engineering, and quantum-mechanical simulations—with the overarching goal of opening unprecedented capabilities for nanoscale quantum sensing through a single-spin molecular platform.
Additional details
You’ll join the Quantum Optospintronics Group at the University of Glasgow, working in a collaborative, supportive, and interdisciplinary environment—spanning solid-state physics, quantum engineering, and physical chemistry—and with state-of-the art facilities (e.g., for detecting individual electron/nuclear spins). We have a broad network of national and international collaborators for you to interface with as well as experience generating related intellectual property (with three patent applications related to optically interfaced molecular spins).