The excitation of a spin liquid on a
honeycomb lattice with neutrons.
Credit: Image courtesy of University
of Cambridge
An
international team of researchers have found evidence of a mysterious new state
of matter, first predicted 40 years ago, in a real material. This state, known
as a quantum spin liquid, causes electrons -- thought to be indivisible
building blocks of nature -- to break into pieces.
The
researchers, including physicists from the University of Cambridge, measured
the first signatures of these fractional particles, known as Majorana fermions,
in a two-dimensional material with a structure similar to graphene. Their
experimental results successfully matched with one of the main theoretical
models for a quantum spin liquid, known as a Kitaev model. The results are
reported in the journal Nature Materials.
Quantum
spin liquids are mysterious states of matter which are thought to be hiding in
certain magnetic materials, but had not been conclusively sighted in nature.
The
observation of one of their most intriguing properties -- electron splitting,
or fractionalisation -- in real materials is a breakthrough. The resulting
Majorana fermions may be used as building blocks of quantum computers, which
would be far faster than conventional computers and would be able to perform
calculations that could not be done otherwise.
"This
is a new quantum state of matter, which has been predicted but hasn't been seen
before," said Dr Johannes Knolle of Cambridge's Cavendish Laboratory, one
of the paper's co-authors.
In
a typical magnetic material, the electrons each behave like tiny bar magnets.
And when a material is cooled to a low enough temperature, the 'magnets' will
order themselves over long ranges, so that all the north magnetic poles point
in the same direction, for example.
But
in a material containing a spin liquid state, even if that material is cooled
to absolute zero, the bar magnets would not align but form an entangled soup
caused by quantum fluctuations.
"Until
recently, we didn't even know what the experimental fingerprints of a quantum
spin liquid would look like," said paper co-author Dr Dmitry Kovrizhin,
also from the Theory of Condensed Matter group of the Cavendish Laboratory.
"One thing we've done in previous work is to ask, if I were performing
experiments on a possible quantum spin liquid, what would I observe?"
Knolle
and Kovrizhin's co-authors, led by Dr Arnab Banerjee and Dr Stephen Nagler from
Oak Ridge National Laboratory in the US, used neutron scattering techniques to
look for experimental evidence of fractionalisation in alpha-ruthenium chloride
(a-RuCl3). The researchers tested the magnetic properties of a-RuCl3 powder by
illuminating it with neutrons, and observing the pattern of ripples that the
neutrons produced on a screen when they scattered from the sample.
A
regular magnet would create distinct sharp lines, but it was a mystery what
sort of pattern the Majorana fermions in a quantum spin liquid would make. The
theoretical prediction of distinct signatures by Knolle and his collaborators
in 2014 match well with the broad humps instead of sharp lines which
experimentalists observed on the screen, providing for the first time direct
evidence of a quantum spin liquid and the fractionalisation of electrons in a
two dimensional material.
"This
is a new addition to a short list of known quantum states of matter," said
Knolle.
"It's
an important step for our understanding of quantum matter," said
Kovrizhin. "It's fun to have another new quantum state that we've never
seen before -- it presents us with new possibilities to try new things."
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/04/160404111559.htm
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