Institutions


Sydney, New South Wales 2052
Australia

Summary: Australia's silicon-quantum powerhouse and the former headquarters of CQC2T; now hosts the ARC Centre of Excellence for Quantum Computer Performance and Integration. The School of Electrical Engineering and Telecommunications holds the group most directly relevant to a sensing postdoc: Jarryd Pla's superconducting-microresonator ESR programme has pushed inductive electron-spin detection toward single-spin sensitivity using Josephson and travelling-wave parametric amplifiers, alongside Morello (single-donor nuclear spins/qudits), Dzurak (Si CMOS spin qubits, Diraq) and Laucht. Physics adds STM atomic-precision fabrication and single-electron potential imaging (Simmons), single-dopant spectroscopy (Rogge), ODMR/EPR of organic and excitonic spins (McCamey), optical tweezers and photonic-crystal biosensing (Reece), and a strong precision-AMO theory group (Flambaum, Berengut) that underpins clock- and EDM-based new-physics searches. UNSW also runs the EMBL Australia Node in Single Molecule Science (Boecking, Gambin, Sierecki, Ananthanarayanan) and a top-tier biosensor group (Gooding, Chemistry), giving unusually good coverage of the quantum-sensing/biosensing interface. Extensive ANFF-NSW cleanroom access.

Notes:

Department(s)/lab(s): School of Physics | Reece Optical Trapping and Nanophotonics Laboratory @ UNSW
Summary:

Reece runs UNSW's optical trapping and nanophotonics laboratory. The group combines optical tweezers with spectroscopy and microfluidics to characterise individual nanoparticles and cells: trapping and spectroscopically interrogating plasmonic core-satellite assemblies (with Gooding and Tilley), measuring single-cell mechanics, and building porous-silicon and photonic-crystal resonant structures for label-free biosensing where the analyte shifts a cavity resonance. Positioned against the established body of NV-ensemble quantum sensing work — DEER, nanoscale NMR and T1 relaxometry protocols operating at pT/sqrt(Hz) field sensitivity — optical trapping is the standard way to hold a nanoscale sensor — including a nanodiamond hosting an NV ensemble at pT/sqrt(Hz) — at a controlled position inside a cell or fluid, and levitated-nanodiamond spin-mechanics is an active field that this group's capabilities map onto almost exactly. Strong practical fit for a bio-oriented quantum sensing candidate.

Department(s)/lab(s): School of Physics | Rogge Single Dopant Spectroscopy Group @ UNSW
Summary:

Rogge (formerly Delft) works on the spectroscopy of individual dopant atoms in silicon: using transport, STM and microwave spectroscopy to read out the orbital, valley and spin structure of single donors and acceptors, including their coupling to strain, electric fields and each other. The group has mapped the wavefunctions of individual dopants and used acceptor spin-orbit coupling for electric-field-driven spin control. This is single-quantum-object measurement rather than device engineering. Positioned against the established body of NV-ensemble quantum sensing work — DEER, nanoscale NMR and T1 relaxometry protocols operating at pT/sqrt(Hz) field sensitivity — single-donor spectroscopy is the silicon analogue of single-NV work: the same questions about coherence, bath engineering and readout fidelity that fix pT/sqrt(Hz) ensemble performance appear here in a platform where the sensor can be placed with atomic precision and interrogated electrically rather than optically.

Department(s)/lab(s): EMBL Australia Node in Single Molecule Science, UNSW Medicine and Health | Sierecki Protein Interaction Networks Group @ UNSW
Summary:

Sierecki co-developed the cell-free single-molecule interaction platform with Gambin and runs a group applying it to protein interaction networks: mapping which proteins bind which, with what affinity and in what stoichiometry, at throughput high enough to screen rather than characterise one pair at a time. Recent applications include viral protein-host interactions and transcription factor complexes. Positioned against the established body of NV-ensemble quantum sensing work — DEER, nanoscale NMR and T1 relaxometry protocols operating at pT/sqrt(Hz) field sensitivity — the relevance to a quantum-sensing candidate is as a source of well-characterised, quantitatively-defined biological targets: a pT/sqrt(Hz)-class sensor is only useful in biology if someone can tell you exactly what molecular species is present and at what concentration, which is what this platform delivers. Borderline inclusion — no quantum or physics-instrumentation component — kept because single-molecule technique development is the core of the group.

Department(s)/lab(s): School of Physics | Atomic Fabrication Facility (Simmons) @ UNSW
Summary:

Simmons pioneered atomic-precision fabrication in silicon: hydrogen-resist STM lithography, phosphine dosing and epitaxial silicon overgrowth to place individual dopant atoms with sub-nanometre accuracy, then measure them at millikelvin. The programme has produced single-atom transistors, precision dopant arrays used as analogue quantum simulators, and the largest atom-scale device platform in the world; she also founded Silicon Quantum Computing Pty Ltd. The sensing-relevant capability is the single-electron transistor as an exquisitely sensitive electrometer, capable of resolving individual charge transitions and mapping local electrostatic potential at the atomic scale. Positioned against the established body of NV-ensemble quantum sensing work — DEER, nanoscale NMR and T1 relaxometry protocols operating at pT/sqrt(Hz) field sensitivity — her SET electrometry is the charge-domain counterpart to magnetic NV sensing at pT/sqrt(Hz): both are single-quantum-object detectors whose performance is limited by back-action and by the noise of the readout chain. Very large group, strongly fabrication-oriented and commercially entangled, which cuts against the stated preference for sensitivity-limited rather than fabrication-limited work.

Department(s)/lab(s): School of Chemistry | Tilley Nanomaterials and Electron Microscopy Group @ UNSW
Summary:

Tilley directs the UNSW Electron Microscope Unit and runs a nanomaterials group whose distinctive capability is in-situ liquid-cell TEM: watching nanoparticle nucleation, growth and catalytic transformation in real time inside the microscope, in liquid, rather than inferring mechanism from before-and-after snapshots. The synthetic side produces magnetic and plasmonic nanoparticles used as biosensor labels and MRI contrast agents, largely in collaboration with Gooding and Reece. Positioned against the established body of NV-ensemble quantum sensing work — DEER, nanoscale NMR and T1 relaxometry protocols operating at pT/sqrt(Hz) field sensitivity — the group is a supplier and characteriser of the nanoparticle probes that in-cell quantum sensing depends on — including the magnetic-nanoparticle labels whose stray fields a pT/sqrt(Hz) NV sensor would actually detect — and the liquid-cell TEM capability is a rare way to validate what those particles are doing in situ. Borderline inclusion (materials characterisation rather than sensing), kept for the collaborative infrastructure it represents.

Department(s)/lab(s): School of Physics | Tinney Exoplanetary Science Group @ UNSW
Summary:

Tinney is an exoplanet hunter who builds the spectrographs he uses. He leads Veloce, the high-resolution, ultra-stable echelle spectrograph on the Anglo-Australian Telescope, whose entire purpose is to measure stellar radial velocities at the ~1 m/s level — a fractional wavelength shift of order 10^-9 — which requires obsessive control of thermal, mechanical and illumination systematics plus laser-comb or etalon wavelength calibration. He also works on brown dwarfs and on disentangling stellar activity from planetary signals. Positioned against the established body of NV-ensemble quantum sensing work — DEER, nanoscale NMR and T1 relaxometry protocols operating at pT/sqrt(Hz) field sensitivity — precision radial velocity is a frequency-metrology problem dressed as astronomy: like a pT/sqrt(Hz) magnetometer, the instrument's raw sensitivity was solved years ago and all remaining progress is in systematics and calibration. Good pivot target for a metrology-trained candidate.

Department(s)/lab(s): School of Electrical Engineering and Telecommunications | Yang Silicon Qubit Systems Group @ UNSW
Summary:

Yang works on the systems-level physics of silicon spin qubits: operating qubits at elevated temperatures (above one kelvin, where cryo-CMOS control electronics can be co-integrated), valley and spin-orbit engineering, and the electrical control of spin qubits without micromagnets. The 'hot qubit' programme in particular is an engineering argument about where the classical/quantum boundary should sit in a real machine. Positioned against the established body of NV-ensemble quantum sensing work — DEER, nanoscale NMR and T1 relaxometry protocols operating at pT/sqrt(Hz) field sensitivity — raising the operating temperature of a spin sensor while preserving coherence is the same trade a pT/sqrt(Hz) NV ensemble makes implicitly by working at room temperature; Yang's work is the silicon community's attempt to buy back some of that convenience. Borderline inclusion — this is quantum computing rather than sensing — retained under the inclusive rubric.