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DE-SC0020254: Heterostructures of quantum spin liquid and quantum electronic liquid for electrically sensing entangled excitations

Award Status: Active
  • Institution: The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN
  • UEI: FN2YCS2YAUW3
  • DUNS:
  • Most Recent Award Date: 07/12/2023
  • Number of Support Periods: 5
  • PM: Cantoni, Claudia
  • Current Budget Period: 08/01/2023 - 07/31/2024
  • Current Project Period: 08/01/2021 - 07/31/2024
  • PI: Zhou, Haidong
  • Supplement Budget Period: N/A
 

Public Abstract


Semiconductor electronics has enjoyed great success in computational and information technologies for several decades thanks to the excellent scalability of conventional semiconductors that enables integrated circuits. This paradigm will however reach its limits within the next decade. Looking forward, fundamentally new operation mechanisms and architectures are necessary for the next generation of devices that can handle complex problems that are beyond the semiconductor electronics. While quantum computing and quantum information have been long recognized as the emerging technologies that promise such advance, there has been a lack of suitable material platforms for scalable realization.

This proposal continues to exploit an advance in heterostructure synthesis to electronically expose the collective spin excitations in geometrically frustrated quantum magnets. Geometrically frustrated quantum magnets have been extensively studied due to their unusual magnetic ground states that are beyond the standard paradigm of symmetry-breaking long-range orders. The associated elementary excitations are highly enigmatic and often quantum mechanically entangled. While these properties could afford new computational mechanisms based on emergent quantum phenomena, it is highly challenging to integrate geometrically frustrated quantum magnets with electrical circuits since they are usually good insulators. The present study will establish a new interfacial approach for metallizing quantum magnets and electrically taming spin entanglements. The project involves a systematic electrical and thermal transport study under magnetic field on a series of prototypical heterojunctions where spin liquid and topological magnetic insulator compounds are interfaced with a correlated metal. The goal of the proposed work is to understand the interfacial effects that enable charge responses to exotic magnetic excitations. The results are expected to present a major step towards functionalizing insulating quantum magnets in integrated electronic technologies.



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