Evidence of macroscopic quantum tunneling detected in nanowires

May 27, 2009 Evidence of macroscopic quantum tunneling detected in nanowires

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Physics professors Alexey Bezryadin, left, and Paul Goldbart flank graduate student Mitrabhanu Sahu, who performed the bulk of the measurements. Image: L. Brian Stauffer

A team of researchers at the University of Illinois has demonstrated that, counter to classical Newtonian mechanics, an entire collection of superconducting electrons in an ultrathin superconducting wire is able to "tunnel" as a pack from a state with a higher electrical current to one with a notably lower current, providing more evidence of the phenomenon of macroscopic quantum tunneling.

Physics professors Alexey Bezryadin and Paul Goldbart led the team, with graduate student Mitrabhanu Sahu performing the bulk of the measurements. Their research was published on the Web site of the journal on May 17.

is the capability of a particle to inhabit regions of space that would normally be off-limits according to classical mechanics. This research observes a process called a quantum phase slip, whereby packs of roughly 100,000 electrons tunnel together from higher electrical current states to lower ones. The energy locked in the motion of the electrons as they phase slip is dissipated as heat, causing the nanowires to switch from a superconducting state to a more highly resistive one.

It's through this switching of states that allows the tunneling of the phase slip to be observed, the researchers say.

Goldbart, who is also a researcher at the university's Frederick Seitz Materials Research Laboratory, describes a quantum phase slip as a phenomenon that allows the spatially extended structure of superconductivity "to undergo a kind of quantum mechanical rip or tear, one where the entire extended behavior of the tunnels its way through a classically forbidden set of configurations."

"Semiconductors, insulators and metals all hinge upon the ability of particles to make it through classically forbidden regions, despite apparently having negative kinetic energy there, as allows," Goldbart said.

In Newton's world, according to Goldbart, particles would be reflected from such regions.

Although quantum mechanics governs the realm of atoms and molecules and smaller, quantum phenomena sometimes "leak up" to macroscopic scales, he said.

The ultrathin superconducting nanowires fabricated and measured by Sahu and his co-researchers are about 2,000 times finer than a single strand of human hair, which is still "a substantially larger scale than where one typically expects to observe quantum tunneling," Bezryadin said.

According to Bezryadin, who is also a researcher at the Beckman Institute and the Illinois Micro and Nanotechnology Laboratory, it has long been established that single electrons can tunnel, but scant evidence has existed until now for the group tunneling of a large ensemble of superconducting electrons confined in a thin wire.

"Observing switching events in superconducting at high-bias currents provides strong evidence for quantum phase slips," Bezryadin said. "Our experiments provide further evidence that the laws of quantum mechanics continue to govern large systems, composed of many thousands of , acting as a single entity."

Both researchers believe that the practical implication of knowledge gleaned from research into quantum tunneling could have applications in the field of quantum computing.

"If we learn how to evade the factors that currently suppress quantum superpositions at the macro-scale," Bezryadin said, "we would be better positioned to construct quantum bits for quantum computers, which could perform tasks with an enormous increase in speed and security."

Source: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (news : web)


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  • superhuman - May 27, 2009
    • Rank: 5 / 5 (3)
    The part about quantum tunneling being impossible in clasical physics is repeated endlessly yet it is not really correct. Yes, a classical particle with energy lower then the barrier cannot traverse the barrier, this is true, but we dont really know the height of barriers involved in tunneling experiments, we only know averaged and approximate values. In reality those barriers are created by billions of rapidly moving charges and so they are highly dynamic. Taking it into account we can easily explain tunneling using just classical physics by simpy stating that the energy of the barrier fluctuates and so particles have a small chance to slip through.
  • LuckyBrandon - May 27, 2009
    • Rank: not rated yet
    well said superhuman
  • NeilFarbstein - May 27, 2009
    • Rank: 1 / 5 (1)
    which nanowire loses its superconductivity? One or both of them?
  • diegopulido - May 28, 2009
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    Mmmmm... Superhuman, it's a fantastic explanation, but It's really true ? Please, Where can I see the source of this explanation ? I'm very interesting in this
  • sender - May 28, 2009
    • Rank: not rated yet
    I was wondering if these same tunnelling effects could be better controlled and observed in graduated non-blinking polycrystalline materials rather than a simple wire wafer...
  • superhuman - Jun 08, 2009
    • Rank: not rated yet
    Mmmmm... Superhuman, it's a fantastic explanation, but It's really true ? Please, Where can I see the source of this explanation ? I'm very interesting in this

    Sorry, I haven't checked back on this topic earlier, I am the source of this particular explanation but if you google "classical tunneling" you will find many articles, some containing very similar ideas.

    As for if it's "really true" I think it's not possible to answer such a question at this time, the explanation is compatible with what we know as far as I can tell, ruling it out would require much more precise measurements of potentials involved or at least a more successful theoretical framework then what we have now.

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