Established in 2020 Wednesday, April 17, 2024


Imaging technique reveals electronic charges with single-atom resolution
High-resolution image of an iron substitution (centre of image) and a samarium vacancy (upper right) on the surface of SmB6. Right - Image of the electric charge in the same area reveals standing wave patterns formed by electrons as they gather around the defects. Scale bar: 2 nanometers. Image courtesy: Harvard SEAS.



BOSTON, MA.- Materials typically conduct electricity or insulate against it – so experimental and theoretical physicists have been captivated by a compound called samarium hexaboride (SmB6) that appears to do both. Numerous studies over the course of 50 years have revealed that SmB6 acts like an insulator as well as an electricity-conducting metal.

Now, researchers from the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences say it’s possible to image the exact position of electrons along the surface of SmB6 with single-atom precision, enabling a breakthrough in understanding the compond’s properties and why it can both insulate and conduct. The findings, published in Science, build upon SEAS research reported in 2019 that determined that SmB6 is a topological insulator – meaning it conducts electricity along its surfaces but not its insides.

Despite the 2019 discovery about SmB6’s surface metallicity, many questions remained about its overall metallicity and why different measurements didn’t generate consistent results.

“Anyone with a voltmeter should be able to tell you whether a material is conductive or insulating,” says Harris Pirie, first author of the paper and a former PhD student in the lab of Clowes Professor of Science Jenny Hoffman at SEAS. But that was never the case with SmB6. “That intrigued us and thrust SmB6 even further into the spotlight within the physics community.

To understand the peculiar behavior of how electrical charges move within SmB6, Pirie and collaborators from University of Oxford, University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC), and other institutions needed to develop a new imaging approach to detect the distribution of electrons on SmB6.

In conversations with Dirk Morr of UIC, the team homed in on the idea of adapting a scanning tunneling microscope, which uses an unimaginably small needle tip to measure atomic structures on the surface of a material. Instead of measuring atomic structure, they used it to detect a magnetic resonance in SmB6 at a cold temperature, a signature of the magnetic interactions that turn the would-be metal into a low-temperature insulator. “That magnetic interaction generates a clear resonance we can measure, and we predicted that if we could measure its excitation energy at different surface points, it would reveal the electronic charge at that position,” Pirie says.

Scanning the needle across the surface of SmB6 to map out the electronic charges across all surface points, the team created a readout that “looks like a topographic map you would have of a mountain range,” Pirie says. Except those mountain peaks and valleys are the size of atoms.




Using this method, the team has captured the first picture of electrons accumulating around atomic defects on SmB6’s surface – even surfaces created by cross-sectioning a sample of SmB6 into fragments. “It was clear right from the moment we took that measurement, we had found the electrons we were looking for,” Pirie says. “We saw these amazing wave patterns that the electrons formed around the defects, indicating a high signal-to-noise ratio. It was a very cool moment.”

“The work gives us new understanding of the importance of single atom defects in topological materials,” says Hoffman, the paper’s senior author.

Pirie is now looking to modify the scanning tunneling microscope method to build new quantum devices. “The atomic defects we’ve identified could be useful in building quantum circuits. The needle of the scanning tunneling microscope can come so ridiculously close to the sample material that it’s no longer passively imaging it – it can touch and change the sample,” he says. “I’m interested in seeing if we can move atoms around on SmB6, pushing all the electrons into specific, controlled channels or puddles. The hope is that by strategically constructing atomic defects on SmB6, electrons could be precisely trapped to form qubits – the basic units necessary for quantum computing."

That might help solve a major barrier to a workable quantum computer: to operate stably, the quantum state of a a quantum computer’s qubits must be entirely prohibited from entangling with electrons in the surrounding environment.

The imaging method could give scientists a powerful high-resolution tool to see what electrons are doing on various materials and compounds, Pirie says. “This tool can look at what the electric charge around just one atom is doing – allowing us to see the world at a smaller scale. There are so many fundamental questions this could help us answer about the world around us.”

Additional authors of the paper are Eric Mascot, Christian E. Matt, Yu Liu, Pengcheng Chen, M. H. Hamidian, Shanta Saha, Xiangfeng Wang, Johnpierre Paglione, Graeme Luke, David Goldhaber-Gordon, Cyrus F. Hirjibehedin, and J. C. Séamus Davis.

This work was supported by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation’s EPiQS

Initiative (grant nos. GBMF4536, GBMF9071, and GBMF9457), the US National Science Foundation (grant nos. DMR-1410480, FA9550-22-1-0023, and FA9550-21-1-0429), the US Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences (award no. DE-FG02-05ER46225), the Swiss National Science Foundation (fellowship no. P400P2183890), the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council, the Science Foundation of Ireland (award no. SFI17/RP/5445), the European Research Council (award no. DLV-788932), and the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant no. 893097).







Today's News

March 31, 2023

Discovery of a new topological phase could lead to exciting developments in nanotechnology

Three newly discovered sea worms that glow in the dark named after creatures from Japanese folklore and marine biologist

Discovery could be key to reducing leukemia treatment resistance

Mimicking biological enzymes may be key to hydrogen fuel production

Detecting coral biodiversity in seawater samples

Feed them or lose them: How developing nerve cells are influenced by essential amino acids

Energy-efficient and customisable inorganic membranes for a cleaner future

Microplastic found in Antarctic krill and salps

Bacterial injection system delivers proteins in mice and human cells

How did the orchid mantis adapt and evolve?

Study finds sulfate pollution impacts Texas gulf coast air

New paper investigates exoplanet climates

Rats! Rodents seem to make the same logical errors humans do

Imaging technique reveals electronic charges with single-atom resolution

Was plate tectonics occurring when life first formed on Earth?

Integrating unique long-term datasets reveals how upwelling affects marine life from the surface to deep seafloor

Dissecting the circadian clock in real time

Magnon-based computation could signal computing paradigm shift



 


Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez



Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the ResearchNews newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful