Dynamic nuclear polarization and the paradox of Quantum Thermalization

Andrea De Luca 1 Alberto Rosso 1

Physical Review Letters, American Physical Society, 2015, 115, pp.080401

Dynamic Nuclear Polarization (DNP) is to date the most effective technique to increase the nuclear polarization up to a factor $100,000$ opening disruptive perspectives for medical applications. In DNP, the nuclear spins are driven to an – out of equilibrium – hyperpolarized state by microwave saturation of the electron spins in interaction with them. Here we show that the electron dipolar interactions compete with the local magnetic fields resulting in two distinct dynamical phases: for strong interactions the electron spins equilibrate to an extremely low effective temperature that boosts DNP efficiency. For weak interaction this spin temperature is not defined and the polarization profile has an ‘hole burning’ shape characteristic of the non interacting case. The study of the many-body eigenstates reveals that these two phases are intimately related to the problem of thermalization in closed quantum systems where breaking of ergodicity is expected varying the strength of the interactions.

  • 1. LPTMS – Laboratoire de Physique Théorique et Modèles Statistiques
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