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Amorphous solids, which show characteristic differences from crystals, are common in daily usage. Glasses, gels, and polymers are familiar examples, and polymers are particularly important in terms of their role in construction and crafting. Previous studies have mainly focused on the bulk properties of polymeric products, and the local properties are less discussed. Here, we designed a distinctive protocol using the negatively charged nitrogen vacancy center in nanodiamond to study properties inside polymeric products in situ. Choosing the curing of poly dimethylsiloxane and the polymerization of cyanoacrylate as subjects of investigation, we measured the time dependence of local pressure and strain in the materials during the chemical processes. From the measurements, we were able to probe the local shear stress inside the two polymeric substances in situ. By regarding the surprisingly large shear stress as the internal tension, we attempted to provide a microscopic explanation for the ultimate tensile strength of a bulk solid. Our current methodology is applicable to any kind of transparent amorphous solids with the stress in the order of MPa and to the study of in situ properties in nanoscale. With better apparatus, we expect the limit can be pushed to sub-MPa scale.
The conversion of neutral nitrogen-vacancy centers to negatively charged nitrogen-vacancy centers is demonstrated for centers created by ion implantation and annealing in high-purity diamond. Conversion occurs with surface exposure to an oxygen atmos
We investigate the influence of plasma treatments, especially a 0V-bias, potentially low damage O$_2$ plasma as well as a biased Ar/SF$_6$/O$_2$ plasma on shallow, negative nitrogen vacancy (NV$^-$) centers. We ignite and sustain using our 0V-bias pl
The dependence of the luminescence of diamonds with negatively charged nitrogen-vacancy centers (NV-) vs. applied magnetic field (magnetic spectrum) was studied. A narrow line in zero magnetic field was discovered. The properties of this line are con
Nanodiamonds containing color centers open up many applications in quantum information processing, metrology, and quantum sensing. In particular, silicon vacancy (SiV) centers are prominent candidates as quantum emitters due to their beneficial optic
Characterizing the local internal environment surrounding solid-state spin defects is crucial to harnessing them as nanoscale sensors of external fields. This is especially germane to the case of defect ensembles which can exhibit a complex interplay