PIs

Department(s)/lab(s): Electrical & Electronic Engineering – Photon Science Institute | Halsall Group (Photonics and Semiconductor Spectroscopy) @ Manchester
Summary:

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.

Department(s)/lab(s): Electrical Engineering, Applied Physics | Donhee Ham Research Group @ Harvard
Summary:

Ham's group builds CMOS integrated-circuit platforms spanning scalable, chip-based NMR spectrometers (including impedance-tuned microwave loops for controlling dense NV-diamond spin ensembles, developed with Ronald Walsworth) and CMOS intracellular microelectrode arrays that record from thousands of neurons in parallel β€” a dual quantum-sensing/bioelectronic-sensing program built around scaling sensitive spin- and electrode-based sensors onto integrated circuits.

Department(s)/lab(s): Chemistry | Hamers Group @ UWMadison
Summary:

Studies surface and interface chemistry of diamond and other materials, including the chemical functionalization and stabilization of near-surface NV and silicon-vacancy color centers used in diamond-based quantum sensors, in collaboration with the Choy group.

Department(s)/lab(s): School of Physics | Quantum Electronic Devices Group (Hamilton) @ UNSW
Summary:

Hamilton heads the Quantum Electronic Devices group and is Deputy Director of the ARC Centre for Future Low Energy Electronics (FLEET). The group works on hole-based quantum devices in GaAs and germanium, where strong spin-orbit coupling allows all-electrical spin control, and on topological materials and one-dimensional transport. The measurements are millikelvin transport and noise spectroscopy of very small signals in mesoscopic devices. 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€” the link is indirect β€” this is charge/spin transport rather than magnetometry β€” but the group's expertise in low-noise cryogenic measurement and in spin-orbit-mediated electrical spin control is directly transferable to electrically-detected spin sensing, which is the main alternative to the optical readout that limits pT/sqrt(Hz) NV ensembles. Borderline inclusion; kept under the inclusive rubric.

Department(s)/lab(s): Chemistry | Han Laboratory @ Northwestern
Summary:

The Han Lab (Chemistry, joined fall 2023) develops quantum sensing tools rooted in electron and nuclear spin physics for life-science applications. Directions: (1) DNP-enhanced NMR quantum sensing using coupled electron-nuclear spin clusters β€” designing novel biradical and multi-spin systems achieving 700-fold ΒΉΒ³C signal enhancement at 14.1 T via P1 center clusters in HPHT diamond (exchange coupling >100 MHz); aiming for in-cell NMR with sensitivity to track water dynamics in a single cell; (2) High-field pulsed EPR at 240 GHz / 8.6 T: time-resolved Gd-Gd EPR (TiGGER) for tracking inter-residue distances during protein functional cycles in solution with sub-nm resolution; rapid-scan field-domain EPR development; (3) Integration of DNP/EPR with nanodiamond-based quantum sensors: coupled electron-nuclear spin cluster design for long-range quantum sensing in biological environments, bridging conventional NMR/EPR and NV-center-based quantum sensing. Han directs the EPR/DNP component of IMSERC (Northwestern's core facility) and brought three new EPR spectrometers and a 600 MHz DNP-NMR system.

Department(s)/lab(s): Chemistry | Han Lab @ UIUC
Summary:

Develops microfluidics and imaging-based spatial-omics technologies for high-resolution, high-throughput assays and modeling of complex biological systems, including bottom-up construction of synthetic cells.

Department(s)/lab(s): Physics (Cavendish Astrophysics) | COAST / MROI Optical Interferometry Group (Haniff) @ Cambridge
Summary:

Haniff co-leads the COAST and MROI optical interferometry program at the Cavendish. His work focuses on aperture synthesis imaging, fringe tracking, detector technology (EMCCDs, L3CCDs), and instrument design for the MROI. He also holds the EPSRC grating-machining grant for ELT spectrograph components. MROI achieved first light in 2025/2026.

Department(s)/lab(s): Physics | IceCube / WIPAC (Hanson group) @ UWMadison
Summary:

Directs the Wisconsin IceCube Particle Astrophysics Center (WIPAC); works on IceCube and next-generation neutrino telescope instrumentation for high-energy astroparticle physics.

Department(s)/lab(s): Physics / QET Labs | Harbord Group (Bristol QET Labs) @ Bristol
Summary:

Edmund Harbord researches quantum communications, solid-state quantum optics, and topological photonic structures. Research: (1) single-photon sources based on solid-state emitters (quantum dots, colour centres); (2) topological photonic crystal structures for robust quantum light propagation; (3) quantum communication protocols. Bridges photonics engineering with quantum networking.

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Department(s)/lab(s): Physics (LKB) | Quantum Optics Team (Microcavities) @ ENS Paris
Summary:

Hare works on whispering-gallery-mode microlasers and microcavities within LKB's quantum-optics research line, exploring high-Q optical microresonators for fundamental light-matter coupling studies and sensing applications.