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Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics (cond-mat.mes-hall)

Thu, 08 Jun 2023

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1.Quantum Tunneling in the Surface Diffusion of Single Hydrogen Atoms on Cu(001)

Authors:Xiaofan Yu, Yangwu Tong, Yong Yang

Abstract: The adsorption and diffusion of hydrogen atoms on Cu(001) are studied using first-principles calculations. By taking into account the contribution of zero-point energy (ZPE), the originally identical barriers are shown to be different for H and D, which are respectively calculated to be ~ 158 meV and ~ 139 meV in height. Using the transfer matrix method (TMM), we are able to calculate the accurate probability of transmission across the barriers. The crucial role of quantum tunneling is clearly demonstrated at low-temperature region. By introducing a temperature-dependent attempting frequency prefactor, the rate constants and diffusion coefficients are calculated. The results are in agreement with the experimental measurements at temperatures from ~ 50 K to 80 K.

2.Resolving nonclassical magnon composition of a magnetic ground state via a qubit

Authors:Anna-Luisa E. Römling, Alejandro Vivas-Viaña, Carlos Sánchez Muñoz, Akashdeep Kamra

Abstract: Recently gained insights into equilibrium squeezing and entanglement harbored by magnets point towards exciting opportunities for quantum science and technology, while concrete protocols for exploiting these are needed. Here, we theoretically demonstrate that a direct dispersive coupling between a qubit and a noneigenmode magnon enables detecting the magnonic number states' quantum superposition that forms the ground state of the actual eigenmode - squeezed-magnon - via qubit excitation spectroscopy. Furthermore, this unique coupling is found to enable control over the equilibrium magnon squeezing and a deterministic generation of squeezed even Fock states via the qubit state and its excitation. Our work demonstrates direct dispersive coupling to noneigenmodes, realizable in spin systems, as a general pathway to exploiting the equilibrium squeezing and related quantum properties thereby motivating a search for similar realizations in other platforms.

3.Tunable magnon topology in monolayer CrI$_\mathbf{3}$ under external stimuli

Authors:M. Soenen, M. V. Milosevic

Abstract: Two-dimensional (2D) honeycomb ferromagnets, such as monolayer chromium-trihalides, are predicted to behave as topological magnon insulators - characterized by an insulating bulk and topologically protected edge states, giving rise to a thermal magnon Hall effect. Here we report the behavior of the topological magnons in monolayer CrI$_3$ under external stimuli, including biaxial and uniaxial strain, electric gating, as well as in-plane and out-of-plane magnetic field, revealing that one can thereby tailor the magnetic states as well as the size and the topology of the magnonic bandgap. These findings broaden the perspective of using 2D magnetic materials to design topological magnonic devices.

4.Engineering flat bands in twisted-bilayer graphene away from the magic angle with chiral optical cavities

Authors:Cunyuan Jiang, Matteo Baggioli, Qing-Dong Jiang

Abstract: Twisted bilayer graphene (TBG) is a recently discovered two-dimensional superlattice structure which exhibits strongly-correlated quantum many-body physics, including strange metallic behavior and unconventional superconductivity. Most of TBG exotic properties are connected to the emergence of a pair of isolated and topological flat electronic bands at the so-called magic angle, $\theta \approx 1.05^{\circ}$, which are nevertheless very fragile. In this work, we show that, by employing chiral optical cavities, the topological flat bands can be stabilized away from the magic angle in an interval of approximately $0.8^{\circ}<\theta<1.3^{\circ}$. As highlighted by a simplified theoretical model, time reversal symmetry breaking, induced by the chiral nature of the cavity, plays a fundamental role in flattening the isolated bands and gapping out the rest of the spectrum. The efficiency of the cavity is discussed as a function of the twisting angle, the light-matter coupling and the optical cavity characteristic frequency. Our results demonstrate the possibility of engineering flat bands in TBG using optical devices, extending the onset of strongly-correlated topological electronic phases in Moir\'e superlattices to a wider range in the twisting angle.

5.Solitons induced by an in-plane magnetic field in rhombohedral multilayer graphene

Authors:Max Tymczyszyn, Peter H. Cross, Edward McCann

Abstract: We model the influence of an in-plane magnetic field on the orbital motion of electrons in rhombohedral graphene multilayers. For zero field, the low-energy band structure includes a pair of flat bands near zero energy which are localized on the surface layers of a finite thin film. For finite field, we find that the zero-energy bands persist and that level bifurcations occur at energies determined by the component of the in-plane wave vector $q$ that is parallel to the external field. The occurrence of level bifurcations is explained by invoking semiclassical quantization of the zero field Fermi surface of rhombohedral graphite. We find parameter regions with a single isoenergetic contour of Berry phase zero corresponding to a conventional Landau level spectrum and regions with two isoenergetic contours, each of Berry phase $\pi$, corresponding to a Dirac-like spectrum of levels. We write down an analogous one-dimensional tight-binding model and relate the persistence of the zero-energy bands in large magnetic fields to a soliton texture supporting zero-energy states in the Su-Schreiffer-Heeger model. We show that different states contributing to the zero-energy flat bands in rhombohedral graphene multilayers in a large field, as determined by the wave vector $q$, are localized on different bulk layers of the system, not just the surfaces.

6.A physically motivated analytical expression for the temperature dependence of the zero-field splitting of the nitrogen-vacancy center in diamond

Authors:M. C. Cambria, G. Thiering, A. Norambuena, H. T. Dinani, A. Gardill, I. Kemeny, V. Lordi, A. Gali, J. R. Maze, S. Kolkowitz

Abstract: The temperature dependence of the zero-field splitting (ZFS) between the $|m_{s}=0\rangle$ and $|m_{s}=\pm 1\rangle$ levels of the nitrogen-vacancy (NV) center's electronic ground-state spin triplet can be used as a robust nanoscale thermometer in a broad range of environments. However, despite numerous measurements of this dependence in different temperature ranges, to our knowledge no analytical expression has been put forward that captures the scaling of the ZFS of the NV center across all relevant temperatures. Here we present a simple, analytical, and physically motivated expression for the temperature dependence of the NV center's ZFS that matches all experimental observations, in which the ZFS shifts in proportion to the occupation numbers of two representative phonon modes. In contrast to prior models our expression does not diverge outside the regions of fitting. We show that our model quantitatively matches experimental measurements of the ZFS from 15 to 500 K in single NV centers in ultra-pure bulk diamond, and we compare our model and measurements to prior models and experimental data.

7.Olympicene radicals as building blocks of two-dimensional anisotropic networks

Authors:Ricardo Ortiz

Abstract: I propose monoradical nanographenes without C3 symmetry as building blocks to design two-dimensional (2D) carbon crystals. As representative examples I study the honeycomb and Kagome lattices, showing that by replacing the sites with olympicene radicals the band dispersion near the Fermi energy corresponds, respectively, to that of Kekul\'e/anti-Kekul\'e graphene and breathing Kagome tight-binding models. As a consequence, finite islands of these new crystals present corner states close to the Fermi energy, just like the parent models. In the case of Kekul\'e/anti-Kekul\'e graphene, such states are topologically protected, standing as examples of second-order topological insulators with a non-zero Z2- or Z6-Berry phase. Differently, those of the breathing Kagome lattice are of trivial nature, but the ground state has been predicted to be a spin liquid in the antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model. Hence, 2D systems made of low-symmetric nanographenes may be convenient platforms to explore exotic physics in carbon materials.

8.Electroluminescence of the graphene 2D semi-metal

Authors:A. Schmitt, L. Abou-Hamdan, M. Tharrault, S. Rossetti, D. Mele, R. Bretel, A. Pierret, M. Rosticher, P. Morfin, T. Taniguchi, K. Watanabe, J. M. Berroir, G. Fève, G. Ménard, B. Plaçais, C. Voisin, J. P. Hugonin, J. J. Greffet, P. Bouchon, Y. De Wilde, E. Baudin

Abstract: Electroluminescence, a non-thermal radiative process, is ubiquitous in semi-conductors and insulators but fundamentally precluded in metals. We show here that this restriction can be circumvented in high-quality graphene. By investigating the radiative emission of semi-metallic graphene field-effect transistors over a broad spectral range, spanning the near- and mid-infrared, we demonstrate direct far-field electroluminescence from hBN-encapsulated graphene in the mid-infrared under large bias in ambient conditions. Through a series of test experiments ruling out its incandescence origin, we determine that the electroluminescent signal results from the electrical pumping produced by interband tunneling. We show that the mid-infrared electroluminescence is spectrally shaped by a natural quarter-wave resonance of the heterostructure. This work invites a reassessment of the use of metals and semi-metals as non-equilibrium light emitters, and the exploration of their intriguing specificities in terms of carrier injection and relaxation, as well as emission tunability and switching speed.