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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsThe Groundbreaking Discovery at SUTD
Researchers at the Singapore University of Technology and Design (SUTD) have made a significant advancement in quantum sensing technology by demonstrating how mechanical strain on diamond crystals can precisely tune the quantum properties of silicon-vacancy centers. This method involves gently stretching or compressing the diamond lattice, unlocking new possibilities for ultra-sensitive sensors capable of detecting minute changes in pressure, temperature, and magnetic fields at the nanoscale.
SUTD's computational modeling revealed that under compression, these defects maintain their structural symmetry, while stretching beyond a 4% threshold triggers a transformation that alters their optical and magnetic signatures predictably. This controllability positions SiV centers as ideal candidates for next-generation quantum devices, particularly in environments where mechanical deformation is prevalent.

Understanding Silicon-Vacancy Centers in Diamond
Silicon-vacancy (SiV) centers are point defects in diamond where a silicon atom replaces two carbon atoms, adjacent to a vacancy. Unlike the more commonly studied nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers, SiV centers exhibit superior optical properties: narrower linewidths, higher brightness, and longer coherence times at room temperature. These traits make them exceptionally suitable for quantum applications.
Diamond, the hardest known material, serves as an ideal host due to its rigidity and biocompatibility. SiV centers emit light at around 737 nanometers in the near-infrared spectrum, allowing for efficient photon collection. Their electron spins can be manipulated with microwaves and read out optically, forming the basis for quantum bits (qubits) and sensors.
In Singapore's burgeoning quantum ecosystem, SUTD's focus on SiV centers aligns with national priorities, building on foundational work in defect engineering.
The Science of Strain Engineering in Diamond
The innovation hinges on elastic strain engineering, where external forces deform the diamond lattice without breaking bonds. Step-by-step, the process unfolds as follows:
- Baseline State: In unstrained diamond, SiV centers have D3d symmetry, with the silicon atom bridging the vacancy.
- Compression (Squeezing): Hydrostatic pressure contracts the lattice uniformly, stabilizing the defect without symmetry change. Optical transitions shift slightly, but remain predictable.
- Critical Stretching: Tensile strain exceeding 4% elongates the lattice along specific axes, inducing a Jahn-Teller distortion. The defect splits into lower-symmetry states.
- Observable Changes: Zero-phonon line (ZPL) energy redshifts, emission intensity modulates, and spin properties evolve, enabling strain readout via spectroscopy.
- Magnetic Tuning: g-factors and hyperfine interactions adjust, enhancing electron spin resonance sensitivity.
This mechanical control offers a non-invasive way to program quantum states, surpassing traditional electrical or optical methods.
SUTD Researchers Leading the Charge
Assistant Professor Yee Sin Ang, holder of the Kwan Im Thong Hood Choo Temple Early Career Chair at SUTD, spearheaded the theoretical modeling. His expertise in condensed matter physics and quantum materials has positioned SUTD at the forefront of applied quantum research. "By showing how mechanical deformation can precisely control the quantum properties of silicon-vacancy centers, we open up new opportunities for designing multifunctional quantum sensors," Ang stated.
Dr. Shibo Fang, SUTD Research Fellow, contributed key simulations, emphasizing predictability: "The defect behaves in a highly controllable way under strain, which is exactly what is required for reliable sensing technologies." Collaborator Professor Yunliang Yue from Yangzhou University highlighted the optical 'ruler' effect for strain measurement.
The paper, published in Applied Physics Letters (DOI: 10.1063/5.0300210), underscores SUTD's computational prowess.
Comparing SiV to NV Centers: Why Strain Matters
NV centers dominate quantum sensing due to room-temperature operation and biocompatibility, used in magnetometry and biomedicine. However, SiV centers surpass NV in decoherence time (over 10x longer) and photon collection efficiency (~70% into ZPL vs. NV's ~3-5%). Strain sensitivity addresses NV limitations under mechanical stress.
- SiV: Narrower linewidth (~100 MHz), ideal for high-resolution spectroscopy.
- NV: Broader emission, phonon-limited at RT.
- Strain Advantage: Tunes SiV without cryogenic cooling, vital for portable sensors.
This positions SiV-strain systems as complementary, expanding diamond defect toolkit.
Real-World Applications of Strain-Tuned Quantum Sensors
Ultra-precise quantum sensors promise transformative impacts:
High-Pressure Physics: Probe material phase transitions at GPa scales, beyond diamond anvil limits.
Nanoscale Devices: Monitor stress in MEMS, NEMS for wearables and IoT.
Biomedical Imaging: Detect cellular forces, magnetic fields in neurons non-invasively.
Materials Science: Inline strain mapping in semiconductors, composites during fabrication.
Global quantum sensors market, valued at ~US$500 million in 2025, is projected to reach US$1.5 billion by 2034 (CAGR ~15%). Singapore aims to capture share via its National Quantum Strategy.
For more on quantum sensing applications, see Harvard's SiV networks research.
SUTD's Pivotal Role in Singapore's Quantum Landscape
Founded in 2009 as Singapore's fourth public university, SUTD collaborates with MIT, emphasizing design-thinking and interdisciplinary tech. Ranked #519 QS 2026, it excels in engineering (top 100 Asia).
SUTD contributes to National Quantum Office (NQO) efforts, with S$300 million invested 2024-2028 in quantum RIE2025 plan. Ecosystem includes CQT-NUS, QSFP, and industry partners like A*STAR.

Challenges in Realizing Strain-Tuned Sensors
Translating modeling to devices faces hurdles: uniform strain application at nanoscale, preserving coherence under dynamic loads, integration with photonics. Experimental verification needed via diamond nanopillars or membranes.
Singapore addresses via nanofab facilities at IME A*STAR. Risks include decoherence from phonons, but SiV's advantages mitigate.
Future Outlook: From Lab to Commercialization
SUTD's work paves for hybrid mechano-quantum devices, potentially revolutionizing navigation (inertial sensing sans GPS), geophysics, and healthcare. Timelines: prototypes in 2-3 years, commercial 5-7 years.
Singapore's quantum push creates jobs: 1,000+ by 2030 in sensing/comms. SUTD grads poised for roles in quantum startups.
For quantum research careers in Singapore, explore research positions.
Implications for Higher Education and Innovation
This breakthrough exemplifies SUTD's impact on Singapore higher ed, fostering translational research. It inspires curricula integrating quantum design, preparing students for industry 4.0.
Stakeholders: Govt via NQO, industry (e.g., quantum firms), academics praise multi-disciplinary approach. Actionable: Pursue PhDs in quantum materials, collaborate cross-institution.

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