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arxiv: 2604.19433 · v1 · submitted 2026-04-21 · ❄️ cond-mat.mes-hall · physics.chem-ph· quant-ph

Towards Application of Nanodiamonds for in-situ Monitoring of Radicals in Liquid Phase Chemical Reactions

Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 02:03 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ❄️ cond-mat.mes-hall physics.chem-phquant-ph
keywords nanodiamondsNV centersT1 relaxometryTEMPOradicalsin-situ detectionliquid phasespin relaxation
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The pith

Nanodiamonds with NV centers detect TEMPO radicals in liquid by shortening spin relaxation time T1 in a concentration-dependent way.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper establishes that nanodiamonds can serve as sensors for radicals in liquid chemical reactions by measuring how those radicals alter the spin properties of embedded NV centers. Nanodiamonds are deposited on the inner wall of a glass cuvette, and the longitudinal relaxation time T1 is read out optically while the liquid contains varying amounts of the nitroxide radical TEMPO. T1 drops from 197 microseconds without radicals to 66 microseconds at 1 molar TEMPO, with the change detectable down to nanomolar concentrations. This provides an in-situ method to observe short-lived radical species without removing samples or adding external probes. The approach relies on the NV center responding to magnetic noise from the radicals' unpaired electrons.

Core claim

We demonstrate the successful in-situ detection of the nitroxide radical 2,2,6,6-Tetramethylpiperidinyloxyl (TEMPO) using NV center-based T1 relaxometry after depositing nanodiamonds onto the inner wall of a glass cuvette. A significant concentration-dependent shortening of the relaxation time was observed, from 197 μs ± 21 μs without radical to 66 μs ± 30 μs at a concentration of 1 M TEMPO. The detection is sensitive in the nanomolar range and the determined signal-to-noise ratio is between 1.6 and 3.

What carries the argument

NV center-based T1 relaxometry, in which the longitudinal spin relaxation time of the nitrogen-vacancy center shortens in response to magnetic fluctuations from nearby unpaired electrons.

If this is right

  • Radical intermediates in liquid-phase reactions can be tracked continuously inside a standard glass cuvette without removing aliquots.
  • The sensor responds across a wide concentration range from nanomolar to molar for nitroxide radicals.
  • Optical readout through the diamond allows detection without electrical contacts or additional chemical labels.
  • Signal-to-noise ratios of 1.6 to 3 support reliable monitoring even at low radical densities.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Continuous T1 monitoring during an ongoing reaction could capture the rise and decay of transient radicals in real time.
  • The same nanodiamond deposition method might be adapted to flow cells or microreactors for online process control.
  • Extending the approach to other radical types would require verifying that their magnetic noise spectra produce measurable T1 changes at similar distances.

Load-bearing premise

The shortening of the T1 relaxation time is caused specifically by magnetic fluctuations from the unpaired electrons of the TEMPO radicals rather than by other changes in the liquid, the cuvette, or the nanodiamond surface after deposition.

What would settle it

Repeating the experiment in the same cuvette with a non-magnetic molecule of similar size and concentration substituted for TEMPO and finding no comparable shortening of T1 would indicate the effect is not specific to radicals.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2604.19433 by Alena Erlenbach, Elke Neu, Emma Herbst, Jonas Gutsche, Maria W\"achtler, Sebastian Westrich.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Illustration of the measurement setup: Nanodiamonds are spin-coated onto the inner upper wall of a cuvette, [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p004_1.png] view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Normalized fluorescence spectra of the different sample components. [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p004_2.png] view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: Confocal scans of samples in a cuvette. TEMPO spectrum in orange appears as merely a line (see Figure 2b). This makes it even clearer that TEMPO fluorescence should not hinder the detection of the NV centers. The spectrum of the nanodiamonds with NV centers shown in red in Figure 2b is in accordance with theory outlined by Rondin et al. (2014) [1], exhibiting a peak at ≈ 640 nm and a broad region extend￾in… view at source ↗
Figure 4
Figure 4. Figure 4: Results of all-optical T1 measurements using freshly prepared TEMPO solutions (shown in purple dots) and a solution six days old (shown in pink stars). The figure shows the T1 time as a function of TEMPO concentration. A higher concentration results in a decrease of the T1 time. The inset in the upper right shows the structural formula of 2,2,6,6- Tetramethylpiperidinyloxyl (TEMPO) [21] [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:f… view at source ↗
read the original abstract

In many chemical reactions, short-lived radical intermediates play a crucial role, while detecting such short-lived species in-situ remains challenging. The optically readable electronic spin of nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in diamond is a nanoscale sensor for such radical species: its longitudinal spin relaxation time (T$_{1}$) reacts to magnetic fluctuations from the unpaired electrons of radical species in its local environment. In this setting, we demonstrate the successful in-situ detection of the nitroxide radical 2,2,6,6-Tetramethylpiperidinyloxyl (TEMPO) using NV center-based T$_1$ relaxometry after depositing nanodiamonds onto the inner wall of a glass cuvette. A significant concentration-dependent shortening of the relaxation time was observed, from $197\:\mu s \pm 21\:\mu s$ without radical to $66\:\mu s \pm 30\:\mu s$ at a concentration of 1 M TEMPO. The detection is sensitive in the nanomolar (nM) range and the determined signal-to-noise ratio is between 1.6 and 3.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

3 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript demonstrates in-situ detection of the nitroxide radical TEMPO in liquid phase using NV-center T1 relaxometry in nanodiamonds deposited on the inner wall of a glass cuvette. It reports a concentration-dependent shortening of the NV T1 time from 197 μs ± 21 μs (no radical) to 66 μs ± 30 μs at 1 M TEMPO, with claimed sensitivity in the nanomolar range and SNR of 1.6–3.

Significance. If the observed T1 shortening can be unambiguously attributed to magnetic noise from TEMPO unpaired electrons, the approach would represent a practical step toward nanoscale, optically readable sensing of radical intermediates in chemical reactions, a longstanding experimental challenge. The cuvette-based geometry is straightforward and potentially scalable, but the current data leave the specificity of the mechanism under-constrained.

major comments (3)
  1. [Experimental Methods] Experimental Methods (or equivalent section describing the cuvette setup): no control measurements are described using diamagnetic species at matched concentrations, pre/post-addition measurements in identical geometry, or surface-passivation checks. Without these, the attribution of the T1 drop specifically to TEMPO magnetic fluctuations (rather than viscosity, dielectric, or surface-charge changes) remains unisolated.
  2. [Results] Results section (concentration-dependence data): the reported T1 shortening is shown at 1 M (a very high concentration), yet the abstract claims nanomolar sensitivity; the manuscript must include the full concentration series, raw decay curves, fitting procedures, and statistical justification for the nM extrapolation and the stated SNR range of 1.6–3.
  3. [Discussion] Discussion of error sources: the large uncertainties (±21 μs and ±30 μs) and the deposition of nanodiamonds directly onto glass raise the possibility of strain or interface effects modulating T1 independently of radicals; these must be quantified or ruled out with additional characterization (e.g., AFM, Raman, or control depositions).
minor comments (2)
  1. [Abstract] The abstract states sensitivity “in the nanomolar (nM) range” but provides no explicit lowest concentration or calibration curve; this should be clarified with a figure or table.
  2. [Methods] Notation for T1 values and units is consistent, but the manuscript should explicitly state the number of independent measurements and the fitting model used to extract T1 from the relaxation curves.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

3 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their constructive and detailed comments, which highlight important aspects for strengthening the attribution of our results and the presentation of the data. We address each major comment point by point below and indicate where revisions to the manuscript will be made.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Experimental Methods] Experimental Methods (or equivalent section describing the cuvette setup): no control measurements are described using diamagnetic species at matched concentrations, pre/post-addition measurements in identical geometry, or surface-passivation checks. Without these, the attribution of the T1 drop specifically to TEMPO magnetic fluctuations (rather than viscosity, dielectric, or surface-charge changes) remains unisolated.

    Authors: We agree that additional controls would further isolate the mechanism. The observed T1 shortening scales specifically with TEMPO concentration and is absent in the no-radical baseline, which is inconsistent with bulk viscosity or dielectric changes (as these would not require unpaired electrons). In the revised manuscript we will expand the Experimental Methods section to explicitly describe the pre- and post-addition protocol in the same cuvette geometry and add a paragraph discussing why non-magnetic effects are unlikely. We will also note that diamagnetic controls (e.g., using TEMPOH) are planned for follow-up work but were outside the scope of this initial demonstration. revision: partial

  2. Referee: [Results] Results section (concentration-dependence data): the reported T1 shortening is shown at 1 M (a very high concentration), yet the abstract claims nanomolar sensitivity; the manuscript must include the full concentration series, raw decay curves, fitting procedures, and statistical justification for the nM extrapolation and the stated SNR range of 1.6–3.

    Authors: The manuscript already contains a concentration series (0 to 1 M) that underpins the claimed dependence and nM extrapolation, but we acknowledge the presentation was insufficiently detailed. In the revised Results section we will (i) display the full concentration series with all measured points, (ii) include representative raw T1 decay curves, (iii) specify the fitting model (single-exponential decay with offset), and (iv) add a statistical subsection deriving the nM sensitivity from the linear slope of 1/T1 versus concentration together with the SNR calculation (signal change divided by measurement standard deviation, yielding the reported 1.6–3 range). revision: yes

  3. Referee: [Discussion] Discussion of error sources: the large uncertainties (±21 μs and ±30 μs) and the deposition of nanodiamonds directly onto glass raise the possibility of strain or interface effects modulating T1 independently of radicals; these must be quantified or ruled out with additional characterization (e.g., AFM, Raman, or control depositions).

    Authors: We will revise the Discussion to include a dedicated paragraph on error sources. The reported uncertainties arise from nanodiamond-to-nanodiamond variability and are already stated; we will quantify their impact on the extracted sensitivity. Regarding glass deposition, we will cite prior work showing that NV T1 in similarly deposited nanodiamonds remains stable in the absence of radicals and will add pre-radical-addition T1 controls to demonstrate that interface/strain effects do not produce the observed concentration-dependent shortening. While AFM or Raman characterization of the specific deposits was not performed, the radical-specific response and consistency with literature T1 values argue against dominant interface modulation. revision: partial

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: direct experimental report with no derivations or self-referential models

full rationale

The manuscript is an experimental demonstration reporting measured T1 values (197 μs ± 21 μs without TEMPO to 66 μs ± 30 μs at 1 M) after nanodiamond deposition in a cuvette. No equations, first-principles derivations, fitted parameters, or predictions are presented that could reduce to the inputs by construction. The central claim rests on observed concentration-dependent shortening rather than any self-definitional loop, self-citation load-bearing step, or renamed ansatz. Self-citations, if present, are not required to justify the measurement itself.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

The work relies on established physics of NV centers without introducing new free parameters, axioms beyond standard quantum sensing, or invented entities.

axioms (1)
  • domain assumption The longitudinal spin relaxation time T1 of NV centers is sensitive to magnetic fluctuations from nearby unpaired electrons in radicals.
    This is a standard assumption in NV-based quantum sensing literature for detecting paramagnetic species.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5520 in / 1411 out tokens · 56897 ms · 2026-05-10T02:03:46.412063+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

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