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3-D insulator loses a dimension to enter magnetic
Flatland
Stanford,
CA, May 31: In a scrambled Rubik's cube, colorful squares clash without order.
As pieces click into place in the hands of a skilled puzzle solver, the
individual characters of squares dissolve as solid faces of uniform color
emerge.
In the
same way, barium copper silicate-also known as ''Han Purple,'' a vivid pigment
used in ancient China-transforms from a nonmagnetic, disordered insulator into a
magnetic, ordered condensate under conditions of extreme cold and high magnetic
field. The components that ''click into place'' to form an entirely new phase
are the electron orientations of atoms, or ''spins,'' described by their quantum
state as ''up'' or ''down.''
Now,
scientists at Stanford, Los Alamos National Laboratory and the Institute for
Solid State Physics (University of Tokyo) have discovered that at the abrupt
lowest temperature transition at which the silicate enters a new state-called
the quantum critical point-the three-dimensional material ''loses'' a dimension
to form a Flatland, of sorts. Just as in the 1884 novella Flatland that posited
a planar world, the spins strongly interact only in two dimensions. Effects from
the third dimension are negligible. Their work appears in the June 1 issue of
Nature.
First
author Suchitra Sebastian of the Geballe Laboratory for Advanced Materials and
of the Applied Physics Department conducted the experiments for her doctoral
dissertation in collaboration with co-authors Ian Fisher, an assistant professor
of applied physics at Stanford who was Sebastian's thesis adviser; scientist
Neil Harrison, who was on Sebastian's thesis committee, and scientist Marcelo
Jaime, postdoctoral fellow Peter Sharma and theorist Cristian Batista, all of
the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory (NHMFL) at its Los Alamos National
Laboratory campus; scientist Luis Balicas of the NHMFL's Florida State
University campus; and Associate Professor Naoki Kawashima of the University of
Tokyo.
''We have
shown, for the first time, that the collective behavior in a bulk
three-dimensional material can actually occur in just two dimensions,'' Fisher
said. ''Low dimensionality is a key ingredient in many exotic theories that
purport to account for various poorly understood phenomena, including
high-temperature superconductivity, but until now there were no clear examples
of 'dimensional reduction' in real materials.''
Harrison
said, ''What these findings in barium copper silicate demonstrate is something
very fundamental that may provide the key toward understanding the role of
dimensionality in quantum critical phenomena. This may be a crucial step for
understanding the required properties of new materials, including more exotic
superconductors, perhaps even ones with superconductance at higher
temperatures.''
In the
normal, or insulating, state of the silicate, a pair of ''up'' and ''down''
spins cancel out each other to produce no net order. But in the magnetic state,
ordering occurs between neighboring electron pairs in all three dimensions. At
magnetic fields above 23 tesla (800,000 times that of the Earth's magnetic
field) and temperatures near absolute zero, the silicate enters a rare state,
called a Bose-Einstein condensate, in which electron spins move as a collective
whole.
From frustration to fruition
At a
critical point, the ordered spins in the condensate appear to lose a dimension.
Think of the silicate as stacked layers. Suddenly, the spins in one layer cannot
influence those of neighboring layers. Magnetic waves travel only along flat
planes rather than throughout the entirety of the three-dimensional material.
Batista
proposed a theoretical explanation for this strange behavior: It may be due to
an effect called ''geometrical frustration.'' In the crystal structure of barium
copper silicate, individual copper atoms in the silicate layers are not stacked
directly above each other, but instead, are shifted over in each layer in zigzag
fashion. Near the critical point, the quantum behavior of the spins in such a
layered arrangement may ''frustrate'' one layer from influencing neighboring
layers.
The
experimental techniques Sebastian and researchers used to show this effect
allowed them to tune high magnetic fields at the lowest experimentally
accessible temperatures to precisely access the immediate vicinity of the
quantum critical point and explore new physics. World-class facilities and
technical support at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory at Tallahassee,
Fla., made this possible. Before this discovery, it had not been possible to
experimentally achieve this level of proximity to the quantum critical point in
Bose-Einstein condensates.
''Magnetic moments associated with the electron spin seem to play a crucial role
in the behavior of high-temperature superconductor materials,'' Batista said.
''Fluctuations of the magnetic moments affect the flow of current-carrying
electrons in a nontrivial way, in particular near the quantum critical point,
where these fluctuations become very large. By studying the quantum critical
behavior of insulating materials (with no current-carrying electrons), we can
isolate the magnetic properties and gain a better understanding of their
possible behaviors.''
The
discovery of reduction in dimensions at the quantum critical point in the
magnetic insulator barium copper silicate provides a clue to mysterious physical
phenomena observed in other materials, such as superconductivity at high
temperatures and the anomalous behavior of metallic magnets known as ''heavy
fermions.''
''The
holy grail for condensed matter physicists is to make the essential step of
understanding the mechanisms that can produce high temperature
superconductivity,'' Harrison said. ''The observed dimensional reduction in the
Bose-Einstein condensate of barium copper silicate provides a particularly vivid
example of the role of dimensionality in condensate physics because it is free
from other complications that cloud our understanding of superconducting
materials.''
While
electron charge now transports information in electronic devices, electron spin
may someday fulfill the same role in ''spintronic'' devices.
''Spin
currents are capable of carrying far more information than a conventional charge
current-which makes them the ideal vehicle for information transport in future
applications such as quantum computing,'' Sebastian said.
Noted
Fisher: ''Our research group focuses on new materials with unconventional
magnetic and electronic properties. Han Purple was first synthesized.
Second Article:
Raiders of the Lost Dimension
Los Alamos, NM, June 1, 2006 - A
team of scientists working at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory's
Pulsed Field Facility at Los Alamos has uncovered an intriguing phenomenon
while studying magnetic waves in barium copper silicate, a 2,500-year-old
pigment known as Han purple. The researchers discovered that when they
exposed newly grown crystals of the pigment to very high magnetic fields at
very low temperatures, it entered a rarely observed state of matter. At the
threshold of that matter state--called the quantum critical point-the waves
actually lose a dimension. That is, the magnetic waves go from a
three-dimensional to a two-dimensional pattern. The discovery is yet
another step toward understanding the quantum mechanics of the universe.
Writing about the work in
today's issue of the scientific journal Nature, the researchers describe how
they discovered that at high magnetic fields (above 23 Tesla) and at
temperatures between 1 and 3 degrees Kelvin (or roughly minus 460 degrees
Fahrenheit), the magnetic waves in Han purple crystals "exist" in a unique
state of matter called a Bose Einstein condensate (BEC). In the BEC state,
magnetic waves propagate simultaneously in all of three directions (up-down,
forward-backward and left-right). At the quantum critical point, however,
the waves stop propagating in the up-down dimension, causing the magnetic
ripples to exist in only two dimensions, much the same way as ripples are
confined to the surface of a pond.
"The reduced dimensionality really came as a surprise," said Neil Harrison,
an experimental physicist at the Los Alamos Pulsed Field Facility, "just
when we thought we had reached an understanding of the quantum nature of its
magnetic BEC."
Harrison and other team members,
including Cristian Batista, Marcelo Jaime and Peter Sharma from Los Alamos
and Suchitra Sebastian and Ian Fisher from Stanford University, believe that
the lost dimension phenomenon is caused by the strange nature of atomic
behavior in quantum states. In the higher temperatures of the BEC state, the
individual waves, which are associated with magnetism from pairs of copper
atoms in the Han Purple pigment, lose their identities and condense into one
giant wave of undulating magnetism. As the temperature is lowered, this
magnetic wave becomes more sensitive to the vertical arrangement of
individual copper layers in the pigment -which are shifted relative to each
other- in a phenomenon called "geometrical frustration." This "geometrical
frustration" makes it difficult for the magnetic waves to propagate in the
third up-down dimension, which leads to its two-dimensionality.
"This is truly paramount work,"
said Alex Lacerda, associate director for user operations for all three
sites of the magnet lab and director of the Pulsed Field Facility. "It takes
world-class magnets, instruments and people, all of which the magnet lab
has, to produce these kinds of landmark results."
The research team also includes
Luis Balicas from the NHMFL facility at Florida State University and Naoki
Kawashima from University of Tokyo. The National Science Foundation through
the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory and Stanford University, the
state of Florida and the U.S. Department of Energy supported the research.
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