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Hirjibehedin Research - Quantum Nanostructures

Nanometer-scale quantum structures are attractive systems for studying new phenomenology arising from the interactions between small numbers of quantum objects.

Nanometer-scale quantum structures are also present challenges and opportunities in the realm of device design. My group’s research primarily utilizes the unique imaging, manipulation, and spectroscopy capabilities of low-temperature scanning tunnelling microscopes (STMs) to explore the magnetic and electronic properties of quantum nanosystems at the atomic scale. We also collaborate with other groups to study these systems using additional theoretical and experimental techniques.

Our research on quantum nanostructures is focused on three major areas:

Magnetic Nanostructures

In addition to its remarkable ability to both image and manipulate individual atoms, STMs can also be used to probe the spectroscopic features of nanostructures at the atomic scale. ÌýUsing STM-based spin excitation spectroscopy [1], we can probe the collective spin excitations of magnetic nanostructures. By using the STM to position magnetic atoms next to each other with atomic-scale precision, we have also explored the evolution of Heisenberg coupling in 1D antiferromagnetic spin chains [2]. ÌýMore recently, this technique has been used to examine the interplay between Kondo screening, magnetic anisotropy, and spin coupling for high-spin atoms on surfaces [3,4,5]. ÌýWe are now also exploring more complex systems, such as magnetic molecules, to understand how their interactions with the surface affect their magnetic properties [7,8] and how this can be applied to produce novel single-molecule device paradigms [9].

For an overview of our work, you can watch a recent invited lecture onÌý.

References

[1] A.J. HeinrichÌýet al., Single-Atom Spin-Flip Spectroscopy,Ìý

[2] C.F. HirjibehedinÌýet al., Spin Coupling in Engineered Atomic Structures,Ìý

[3] C.F. HirjibehedinÌýet al., Large Magnetic Anisotropy of a Single Atomic Spin Embedded in a Surface Molecular Network,Ìý

[4] A.F. OtteÌýet al., The role of magnetic anisotropy in the Kondo effect,Ìý

[5] A. F. OtteÌýet al., Spin Excitations of a Kondo-Screened Atom Coupled to a Second Magnetic Atom,Ìý

[6] J.C. ObergÌýet al.,ÌýControl of single-spin magnetic anisotropy by exchange coupling,Ìý

[7] T. PalamarciucÌýet al., Spin crossover materials evaporated in clean high vacuum and ultra-high vacuum conditions: from thin films to single molecules,Ìý

[8] B. Warner et al.,ÌýTemperature- and Light-Induced Spin Crossover Observed by X‑ray Spectroscopy on Isolated Fe(II) Complexes on Gold,Ìý

[9]ÌýBen WarnerÌýet al.,ÌýTunable magnetoresistance in an asymmetrically coupled single-molecule junction,Ìý

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Defects in Semiconductors

The power of semiconductor materials, which have been at the heart of the information technology industry for more than half a century, comes from the ability to modify their electronic (and more recently magnetic) properties through the addition of impurity atoms. ÌýIn the past, these dopants were added to semiconductors in bulk quantities. ÌýHowever, the decades-long march of Moore’s Law in shrinking the size of semiconductor devices now requires us to focus on the properties of these dopants at the single atom scale. ÌýIn collaboration with a number of other groups, we are exploring the influence of dopants in conventional semiconductors like silicon [1,2] and GaAs [3] to understand their potential applications for the ultimate limit of electronic and spintronic devices. ÌýMuch of this work is through theÌýÌýcollaboration, which focuses on making atomic-scale devices in silicon and studying their application for quantum computation. We are also exploring ways to modify the properties of individual defects, such as using strain created at anti-phase boundaries on the Si(111)-2x1 surface [4] and using hydrogen lithography to make interacting dangling bond defects [5].

For an overview of this work, you can read an article in theÌý, a science magazine for students.

References

[1] P. StuderÌýet al.,ÌýSite-Dependent Ambipolar Charge States Induced by Group V Atoms in a Silicon Surface,Ìý

[2]ÌýP. StuderÌýet al.,ÌýStudying atomic scale structural and electronic properties of ion implanted silicon samples using cross-sectional scanning tunneling microscopy,Ìý

[3] M. BozkurtÌýet al.,ÌýMagnetic anisotropy of single Mn acceptors in GaAs in an external magnetic field,Ìý

[4] P. StuderÌýet al.,ÌýModel system for controlling strain in silicon at the atomic scale,Ìý

[5] S.R. SchofieldÌýet al.,ÌýQuantum engineering at the silicon surface using dangling bonds,Ìý

Low Dimensional Quantum Systems

Low dimensional electron systems, in which one or more spatial dimensions are small enough to restrict the quantum mechanical wavefunction of electrons contained inside, exhibit some of the most diverse and intriguing physical phenomena seen in all of condensed matter physics. One low-dimensional material that has received considerable interest since its discovery less than a decade ago is graphene. Made from a two-dimensional network of carbon atoms just one atom thick, this simple structure has truly remarkable properties. One of the key factors in the advancing the use of graphene in commercial devices is the ability to produce it at an industrial scale, and one of the most potentially useful processes for this is chemical vapor depositions. In collaborations with a number of other groups, we have studied the nucleation and growth of graphene on Cu surfaces [1]. More recently, we have also begun to study other low-dimensional materials, such as silicene [2].

As with other semiconductors, the properties of graphene can be readily tuned by adding charge carriers, a process known as doping. The usual method for doping graphene is via the electric-field effect. However, ten times as many charge carriers can be added by chemical doping, i.e., decorating the graphene surface with atoms. Recently, in collaboration with a number of other groups, we used STM to investigate the graphene-terminated surface of CaC6, a graphite intercalate compound (GIC) that superconducts above 10 K. Surprisingly, when we imaged the surface of CaC6 above the superconducting transition temperature, we found nanometer-scale one-dimensional stripes that correspond to a charge density wave (CDW) [3], a low-dimensional charge-ordered state that is often found in materials that exhibit superconductivity.

Another way to form a low dimensional electron system is to confine charge carriers in the layers of a semiconductor heterostructure. One of the most powerful ways to study the collective excitations of such systems is with inelastic light scattering (often called Raman scattering). This technique can provide a unique way to probe the emergent states that arise in these systems from many-body interactions, and has been used to explore the collective excitations of fractional Quantum Hall liquids [4,5,6], as well as the strongly correlated regime in ultra-low-density electron gases [7].

References

[1] H.K. KimÌýet al., Activation energy paths for graphene nucleation and growth on Cu,Ìý

[2] A. FleurenceÌýet al.,ÌýSingle-domain epitaxial silicene on diboride thin films,Ìý

[3] K.C. RahnejatÌýet al., Charge density waves in the graphene sheets of the superconductor CaC6,Ìý

[4] C.F. HirjibehedinÌýet al., Crossover and Coexistence of Quasiparticle Excitations in the Fractional Quantum Hall Regime at nu <= 1/3,Ìý

[5] C.F. HirjibehedinÌýet al., Splitting of Long-Wavelength Modes of the Fractional Quantum Hall Liquid at nu <= 1/3,Ìý

[6] T.D. RhoneÌýet al., Higher-Energy Composite Fermion Levels in the Fractional Quantum Hall Effect,Ìý

[7] C.F. HirjibehedinÌýet al., Evidence of Electron Correlations in Plasmon Dispersions of Ultralow Density Two-Dimensional Electron Systems,Ìý

You can also learn more about our work from videos on our :

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