Researchers hear puzzling new physics from graphene quartet's quantum harmonies
September 8, 2010
The NIST scanning-probe microscope was used to study electron states in graphene under conditions of ultra-high vacuum, ultra-low temperatures, and large magnetic fields. Georgia Tech provided the epitaxial graphene samples studied.
Using a one-of-a-kind instrument designed and built at the National Institute of Standards and Technology, an international team of researchers have "unveiled" a quartet of graphene's electron states and discovered that electrons in graphene can split up into an unexpected and tantalizing set of energy levels when exposed to extremely low temperatures and extremely high magnetic fields.
Published in this week's issue of Nature, the new research raises several intriguing questions about the fundamental physics of this exciting material and reveals new effects that may make graphene even more powerful than previously expected for practical applications.
Graphene is one of the simplest materials—a single-atom-thick sheet of carbon atoms arranged in a honeycomb-like lattice—yet it has many remarkable and surprisingly complex properties. Measuring and understanding how electrons carry current through the sheet is important to realizing its technological promise in wide-ranging applications, including high speed electronics and sensors. For example, the electrons in graphene act as if they have no mass and are almost 100 times more mobile than in silicon. Moreover, the speed with which electrons move through graphene is not related to their energy, unlike materials such as silicon where more voltage must be applied to increase their speed, which creates heat that is detrimental to most applications.
To fully understand the behavior of graphene's electrons, scientists must study the material under an extreme environment of ultra-high vacuum, ultra-low temperatures and large magnetic fields. Under these conditions, the graphene sheet remains pristine for weeks, and the energy levels and interactions between the electrons can be observed with precision (see "Graphene Yields Secrets to Its Extraordinary Properties," http://www.physorg … 1529738.html).
NIST recently constructed the world's most powerful and stable scanning-probe microscope, with an unprecedented combination of low temperature (as low as 10 millikelvin, or 10 thousandths of a degree above absolute zero), ultra-high vacuum and high magnetic field. In the first measurements made with this instrument, the team has used its power to resolve the finest differences in the electron energies in graphene, atom-by-atom.
"Going to this resolution allows you to see new physics," said Young Jae Song, a postdoctoral researcher who helped develop the instrument at NIST and make these first measurements.
And the new physics the team saw raises a few more questions about how the electrons behave in graphene than it answers.
Because of the geometry and electromagnetic properties of graphene's structure, an electron in any given energy level populates four possible sublevels, called a "quartet." Theorists have predicted that this quartet of levels would split into different energies when immersed in a magnetic field, but until recently there had not been an instrument sensitive enough to resolve these differences.
"When we increased the magnetic field at extreme low temperatures, we observed unexpectedly complex quantum behavior of the electrons," said NIST Fellow Joseph Stroscio.
What is happening, according to Stroscio, appears to be a "many-body effect" in which electrons interact strongly with one another in ways that affect their energy levels.
One possible explanation for this behavior is that the electrons have formed a "condensate" in which they cease moving independently of one another and act as a single coordinated unit.
"If our hypothesis proves to be correct, it could point the way to the creation of smaller, very-low-heat producing, highly energy efficient electronic devices based upon graphene," said Shaffique Adam, a postdoctoral researcher who assisted with theoretical analysis of the measurements.
The research team, led by Joseph Stroscio, includes collaborators from NIST, the University of Maryland, Seoul National University, the Georgia Institute of Technology, and the University of Texas at Austin.
The group's work was also recently featured in Nature Physics,** in which they describe how the energy levels of graphene's electrons vary with position as they move along the material's crystal structure. The way in which the energy varies suggests that interactions between electrons in neighboring layers may play a role.
More information: *Y.J. Song, A.F. Otte, Y. Kuk, Y.Hu, D.B. Torrance, P.N. First, W.A. de Heer, H. Min, S. Adam, M.D. Stiles, A.H. MacDonald and J.A. Stroscio. High Resolution Tunnelling Spectroscopy of a Graphene Quartet, Nature, Sept. 9, 2010.
**D.L. Miller, K.D. Kubista, G.M. Rutter, Ming Ruan, W.A. de Heer, M. Kindermann, P.N. First and J.A. Stroscio. Real-space mapping of magnetically quantized graphene states. Nature Physics. Published online Aug. 8, 2010. http://www.nature. … hys1736.html
Provided by National Institute of Standards and Technology (news : web)
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Sep 08, 2010
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Sep 09, 2010
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What might produce this result? The article suggests a condensate of some type, but I have a different view. In posts following other Phys Org articles, I have referenced Art Winfree's work on coupled oscillators (in biology), in which he showed how limit cycle oscillators will synchronize their oscillations in certain exact patterns. I apply his theory to physics, but I reverse it: oscillations interact in precise patterns and organize the oscillators (highly mobile electrons in this case) in precise ways. Here, the organization appears to be exactly antisynchronous, in two different types of oscillation. (A and antisynch A; B and antisynch B.) The external magnetic field further constricts the allowable outcomes.
Sep 09, 2010
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Sep 09, 2010
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How about because you can't just "solve" a three or four body problem like that. It's mathematically impossible, and you'd know it if you had taken even the most basic of college physics courses.
LOL indeed.
EDIT: Moreover, this is quantum physics, where particles are represented as probability distributions and waves, not little balls moving on lines. Those pictures you have are absolute garbage.
Sep 09, 2010
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Sep 09, 2010
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Except that you're missing the point, that there are no point particles to simulate in the first place, just probability density waves. This isn't really something you can dispute anymore, since it's been shown that physics simply doesn't work using point particles flying around, no matter how you use them.
Sep 09, 2010
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Sep 09, 2010
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Dense aether theory provides such way and it was never tested. Nevertheless, these effects can be predicted with using of "classical" quantum mechanics too, as Vitali Efimov demonstrated before thirty years.
Sep 09, 2010
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And that's exactly the problem with aether theory in general (though calling it a "theory" gives it credit it hasn't earned). It makes no testable predictions.
Actually it makes no predictions at all; I have yet to see any mathematics whatsoever. Google it and you turn up nothing but crackpots. Any descriptions of it are simply text, or pictures.
Meaningful theories are based on mathematics. Physics isn't just about knowing that what goes up must come down, it's about knowing exactly when and where it will come down.
And finally, let me state again that you cannot get the same results from ANY classical theory that you get in quantum mechanics. The concept of "point particles" has literally no predictive power, and is simply wrong on the most fundamental level. It's very easy to prove this fact using Bell Inequalities.
Sep 09, 2010
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String theory and aether theories aren't in the same situation at all. String theory is based on verifiable mathematics, has provided numerous insights in both physics and mathematics, and has greatly advanced science in general. Aether theories have done none of these things.
Then why bother with it? If it doesn't provide any insight, and isn't mathematically describable, then how can it possibly bear any relation to reality, on any level? Physics right now allows for perfect prediction of single particle interactions. If aether theory can't do that, then can it do anything?
Sep 09, 2010
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Give us your theory. And if that is not yet available, at least tell us whether you think the results discussed in the article are significant.
Macksb
Sep 09, 2010
Rank: 5 / 5 (2)
Quantum Physics.
Not even sure where to start here (partially because I'm having a hard time making sense of what you're writing)...
You can't predict simple doppler shifts (the easiest thing to do btw). Your ideas are "qualitative". And you compared this to the heliocentric/geocentric models, which are irrelevant to this argument.
You claimed to be able to simulate aether theory "with using of computer in solely mechanic way". Do you have code for this? Decompiled code that I can read, in some nonobscure format?
Since you have no math and no predictions, it seems like that's the only thing I can look at.
Sep 09, 2010
Rank: 5 / 5 (3)
This statement doesn't make any sense. Logic IS math.
I'd love to see you do that, since string theory and its "pile of equations" are in fact logically consistent.
So you prefer a theory that "feels good" but has no math, to a real theory.
This is the only reasonable thing you've said so far.
Sep 09, 2010
Rank: 5 / 5 (1)
That's just not true.
Thanks for the populism.
I have to go, but thanks for giving up on driving aether theory junk down our throats.
Sep 09, 2010
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Sorry, I didn't notice your earlier post.
I think that the graphene energy levels issue is of interest, mostly because they can be probed in detail due to the high conductivity (and structure) of the material. That opens up a lot of interesting experimental possibilities, particularly in terms of evaluating things such as the effects of stress and strain in the material - effects that often lead to the rise of intense local magnetic fields. So basically you could do something similar to a Mossbauer experiment, which is fun.
Sep 09, 2010
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Thanks. Your comments are helpful.
Macksb
Sep 10, 2010
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