Nanodiamonds hosting colour centres are promising building blocks for quantum technologies, enabling advances in quantum computation1,2, nanoscale NMR spectroscopy3–6, single-spin magnetometry7,8, wide-field quantum imaging9 and single-photon sources10,11. However, the controlled bottom-up synthesis of ultrasmall and structurally uniform nanodiamonds has remained a major challenge, with existing methods producing heterogeneous materials that vary in size, morphology, impurity content and defect quality. Here we show that well-defined, hydrogen-terminated molecular nanographenes serve as chemically confined precursors for high-pressure, high-temperature synthesis of ultrasmall (3–4 nm), monodisperse and highly crystalline molecular nanodiamonds (m-NDs) with only a single sp² surface reconstruction and produced on a milligram scale. The same bottom-up platform also enables a two-component strategy for incorporating silicon- and germanium-based colour centres during synthesis, yielding SiV⁻ and GeV⁻ emitters without ion implantation, irradiation or post-treatment. Because the nanographene precursor defines both the confined carbon framework and the hydrogen content, this approach provides intrinsic, precursor-level control over nanodiamond size and composition, particularly in the low-nanometre regime relevant for biological and quantum sensing. Molecular nanographenes, ultralarge polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, therefore establish a scalable and modular route to high-quality molecular and fluorescent nanodiamonds and offer a general design principle for tailored quantum materials and nanoscale devices.
Bottom-Up Synthesis of Molecular Nanodiamond from Nanographene
Why This Matters
This breakthrough in bottom-up synthesis of molecular nanodiamonds from nanographenes offers a scalable and precise method to produce ultrasmall, uniform, and highly crystalline nanodiamonds with customizable color centers. This advancement is significant for quantum technologies, biological sensing, and nanoscale devices, as it overcomes previous limitations related to heterogeneity and post-synthesis modifications. The ability to control size, composition, and embedded quantum emitters directly during synthesis paves the way for more reliable and versatile quantum materials and applications.
Key Takeaways
- Enables scalable production of uniform nanodiamonds with precise size control.
- Allows incorporation of quantum color centers during synthesis without post-treatment.
- Provides a modular platform for designing tailored quantum materials and nanoscale devices.
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