Halsall is a senior PSI photonics researcher focusing on semiconductor spectroscopy and photonic quantum device characterization. Research directions: (1) Deep-level transient spectroscopy (DLTS) β characterizing defects and impurities in semiconductor quantum device structures (Si, GaN, SiC) that are relevant to qubit coherence; (2) Photoluminescence mapping β spatial mapping of optical quality in quantum well and dot wafers for quantum sensing device development; (3) InGaN/GaN quantum wells β non-destructive optical characterization of LED and sensor structures; (4) THz and infrared spectroscopy β contactless Hall measurements and Drude response for quantum material characterization. Provides photonic metrology tools for characterizing quantum sensing device materials.
Hibberd holds an EPSRC Ernest Rutherford Fellowship at Manchester's PSI. Research directions: (1) Ultrafast THz spectroscopy of magnetic materials β probing spin dynamics, magnon modes, and phase transitions in correlated magnetic materials with sub-ps time resolution using intense THz pulses; (2) THz-driven spintronics β using THz electric and magnetic fields to switch magnetization and induce spin currents; (3) THz generation from spintronic heterostructures β using ultrafast spin-charge conversion as a broadband THz emitter for materials characterization; (4) Quantum magnonics β studying collective spin excitations (magnons) as quantum sensors of materials order parameters. Bridges ultrafast optics and quantum sensing of magnetic phases.
Kassal is the leading Australian theorist of quantum effects in light harvesting. He established the distinction between coherent processes and coherent states in photosynthesis β showing that under incoherent sunlight at steady state, wavelike motion per se does not enhance efficiency, while environment-assisted transport and supertransfer genuinely can β and has since developed a classification of the mechanisms by which coherence (excitonic, vibrational, or of the light field itself) can improve energy transport. He also pioneered quantum-computer algorithms for chemistry. A distinct and directly relevant thread is the theory of spectroscopy with non-classical light: what entangled or squeezed photons can reveal about molecular coherence that classical light cannot. Positioned against the established body of NV-ensemble quantum sensing work β DEER, nanoscale NMR and T1 relaxometry protocols operating at pT/sqrt(Hz) field sensitivity β his work is the theoretical counterpart to the quantum-biology ambitions of the NV community: where NV ensembles at pT/sqrt(Hz) try to detect the magnetic signatures of biological spin chemistry, Kassal asks what quantum coherence is actually doing in those systems and whether quantum light can interrogate it.
McCamey is, for a candidate coming from NV ensemble sensing, the single most methodologically adjacent PI at UNSW. His laboratory does optically and electrically detected magnetic resonance on spins that are not defects in diamond: photogenerated spin-correlated radical pairs, triplet excitons in organic semiconductors, singlet-fission intermediates, and molecular spin systems. The instrumentation is the same toolkit β pulsed EPR, ODMR, dynamical decoupling, relaxometry β applied to systems where the spin is created by light and reports on chemistry. He directs the UNSW node of ARC Exciton Science. Positioned against the established body of NV-ensemble quantum sensing work β DEER, nanoscale NMR and T1 relaxometry protocols operating at pT/sqrt(Hz) field sensitivity β his group runs precisely those pulse sequences (Hahn echo, DEER, relaxometry) on a different spin species, and radical-pair spin chemistry is one of the few plausible mechanisms by which biology could be genuinely quantum β which makes this a strong landing spot for someone wanting to keep the NV skill set but change the physical system. Preferred attributes present: sensitivity-limited spin measurement, quantum-biology relevance.
Olaya-Castro leads theoretical research on quantum phenomena in biological systems. Research directions: (1) Quantum coherence in photosynthesis β open quantum systems theory for energy transfer in light-harvesting complexes, probing whether quantum coherence provides functional advantage; vibronic coupling models for chromophore-protein complexes; (2) Counting statistics and noise in exciton and charge transfer; (3) Quantum thermodynamics of biomolecular machines β efficiency limits and entropy production in molecular motors; (4) Non-classical features of electronic/vibrational dynamics in chromophores; (5) Connections between quantum information measures and biological function. Collaborates with Bain and Llorente-Garcia on joint experiment/theory biosensing projects. Theoretical work only β no experimental activity.
Parkinson's group uses ultrafast optical spectroscopy to study carrier dynamics in photonic materials with quantum device applications. Research directions: (1) Time-resolved photoluminescence β TRPL with single-photon counting to map exciton lifetimes, diffusion, and defect trapping in GaN, perovskite, and 2D semiconductor quantum wells; (2) Optical single-particle spectroscopy β isolating single nanowires or nanocrystals for defect-free measurements of intrinsic optical properties; (3) Photon-number statistics β Hanbury BrownβTwiss measurements of single-photon purity from quantum dots and localized excitons; (4) Semiconductor quantum sensing interfaces β studying how carrier dynamics affect the fidelity of semiconductor-based quantum sensors and emitters.
Rao's group uses ultrafast (sub-20 fs) transient absorption and vibronic spectroscopy to study quantum-coherent energy and charge transfer processes in molecular and nanoscale semiconductor systems, most notably the quantum-coherent mechanism of singlet exciton fission, with applications to next-generation photovoltaics.
Scholes uses multidimensional ultrafast and coherence spectroscopies to probe wavepacket dynamics and quantum-mechanical phenomena in photosynthetic light-harvesting complexes, cavity QED, and photo-activated chemistry, including his group's resolution of a decade-long controversy over long-lived coherent coupling in the Fenna-Matthews-Olson complex. His current work extends coherence spectroscopy to quantum information science and photobiomodulation, squarely fitting the fundamental light-physics/quantum-optics side of the filter.
Sokolov develops femtosecond adaptive spectroscopic techniques for coherent Raman (FAST CARS), broadband stochastic laser fields, and quantum-light probes of molecular coherence for standoff chemical/biological sensing and label-free imaging. In the broader landscape of NV-centre ensemble quantum sensing (DEER, nano-NMR, T1 relaxometry) operating near pT/sqrt(Hz) sensitivity, this work contributes ultrafast coherent-Raman methodology adjacent to spin-based sensing.
Tempelaar develops theory and simulation methods (surface-hopping and vibronic exciton models) for two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy, explaining how vibronic coupling sustains excitonic coherence in photosynthetic light-harvesting complexes such as the Fenna-Matthews-Olson complex and LH2, and extending these ideas to singlet fission and organic-semiconductor aggregates. He is a faculty affiliate of Northwestern's Institute for Quantum Information Research and Engineering (INQUIRE).