管家婆免费开奖大全

Physicists create 'quasicrystals' that exhibit superconductive properties

鈥淲e don鈥檛 yet fully understand the system. There are still quite a few mysteries.鈥
""

MIT鈥檚 Aviram Uri, left, and 管家婆免费开奖大全鈥檚 Sergio C. de la Barrera are part of a team that coaxed superconductivity from an enigmatic class of materials known as quasicrystals (photo by Eva Cheung)

Researchers at the 管家婆免费开奖大全 and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have discovered a way to create new atomically thin versions of quasicrystals 鈥 an enigmatic class of materials 鈥 that exhibit superconductivity.

The work by Sergio C. de la Barrera, an assistant professor in 管家婆免费开奖大全鈥檚 department of physics, and his MIT colleagues promises to jumpstart interest in quasicrystals by creating a new platform for further research. That, in turn, could lead to new physics insights and important applications such as more efficient electronic devices.

the research and brings together two previously unconnected fields: 鈥渜uasicrystals鈥 and 鈥渢wistronics.鈥

鈥淚t's really extraordinary that the field of twistronics keeps making unexpected connections to other areas of physics and chemistry 鈥 in this case the beautiful and exotic world of quasiperiodic crystals,鈥 says Pablo Jarillo-Herrero, the Cecil and Ida Green Professor of Physics at MIT who pioneered the field of twistronics only five years ago.

Twistronics involves placing atomically thin layers of materials on top of one another. Rotating, or twisting, one or more of the layers at a slight angle creates a unique pattern called a moir茅 superlattice. And a moir茅 pattern, in turn, has an impact on the behaviour of electrons.

鈥淚t changes the spectrum of energy levels available to the electrons and can provide the conditions for interesting phenomena to arise,鈥 says de la Barrera, one of four co-first authors of the recent paper who conducted the work while a postdoctoral associate at MIT.

A moir茅 system can also be tailored for different behaviors by changing the number of electrons added to the system. As a result, the field of twistronics has exploded over the last five years as researchers around the world have applied it to creating new atomically thin quantum materials.

""
Image of a moir茅 quasicrystal, center column, created by three overlapping sheets of atomically thin graphene (photo credit: Sergio C. de la Barrera)

In the current work, the researchers were tinkering with a moir茅 system made of three sheets of graphene. Graphene is composed of a single layer of carbon atoms arranged in hexagons resembling a honeycomb structure. In this case, the team layered three sheets of graphene, but twisted two of the sheets at slightly different angles.

To their surprise, the system created a quasicrystal, an unusual class of material discovered in the 1980s. As the name implies, quasicrystals are somewhere between a crystal such as a diamond, which has a regular repeating structure, and an amorphous material like glass, 鈥渨here the atoms are all jumbled, or randomly arranged,鈥 says de la Barrera.

In a nutshell, quasicrystals 鈥渉ave really strange patterns,鈥 de la Barrera says.

Compared to crystals and amorphous materials, however, relatively little is known about quasicrystals. That鈥檚 in part because they鈥檙e hard to make. 鈥淭hat doesn鈥檛 mean they鈥檙e not interesting; it just means that we haven鈥檛 paid as much attention to them, particularly to their electronic properties,鈥 says de la Barrera, adding that the relatively simple quasicrystal created by the study鈥檚 authors could be used by other researchers as a platform to advance the field.

Because the original researchers weren鈥檛 experts in quasicrystals, they reached out to Professor Ron Lifshitz of Tel Aviv University, a co-author who helped the team to better understand what they were looking at, which they call a moir茅 quasicrystal.

The physicists then tuned a moir茅 quasicrystal to make it superconducting, or transmit current with no resistance at all below a certain low temperature. That鈥檚 important because superconducting devices could transfer current through electronic devices much more efficiently than is possible today, but the phenomenon is still not fully understood in all cases. 

The team also found evidence of symmetry breaking 鈥 a phenomenon that 鈥渢ells us that the electrons are interacting with one another very strongly,鈥 de la Barrera says. 鈥淎nd as physicists and quantum material scientists, we want our electrons interacting with each other because that鈥檚 where the exotic physics happens.鈥 

In the end, 鈥渢hrough discussions across continents we were able to decipher this thing, and now we believe we have a good handle on what鈥檚 going on,鈥 says Aviram Uri, a co-first author of the paper and an MIT Pappalardo and VATAT postdoctoral fellow, although he notes that 鈥渨e don鈥檛 yet fully understand the system. There are still quite a few mysteries.鈥

The best part of the research was 鈥渟olving the puzzle of what it was we had actually created,鈥 de la Barrera says. 鈥淲e were expecting [something else], so it was a very pleasant surprise when we realized we were actually looking at something very new and different.鈥

With files from Elizabeth A. Thomson, MIT

The Bulletin Brief logo

Subscribe to The Bulletin Brief

Arts & Science