Physicists create five-lane superhighway for electrons

physicists create five-lane superhighway for electrons

Artist’s rendition of the superhighway for electrons that can occur in rhombohedral graphene, a special kind of graphite (pencil lead). Credit: Sampson Wilcox, MIT Research Laboratory of Electronics

MIT physicists and colleagues have created a five-lane superhighway for electrons that could allow ultra-efficient electronics and more. The work, reported in the May 9 issue of Science, is one of several important discoveries by the same team over the last year involving a material that is essentially a unique form of pencil lead.

physicists create five-lane superhighway for electrons

MIT physicists have created a five-lane superhighway for electrons. Here are six of the researchers in the lab. They are, L-R, graduate students Jixiang Yang, Junseok Seo, and Tonghang Han; visiting undergraduate student Yuxuan Yao; Assistant Professor Long Ju, and postdoc Zhengguang Lu. Credit: Shenyong Ye, MIT

"This discovery has direct implications for low-power electronic devices because no energy is lost during the propagation of electrons, which is not the case in regular materials where the electrons are scattered," says Long Ju, an assistant professor in the MIT Department of Physics and corresponding author of the paper.

The phenomenon is akin to cars traveling down an open turnpike as opposed to those moving through neighborhoods. The neighborhood cars can be stopped or slowed by other drivers making abrupt stops or U-turns that disrupt an otherwise smooth commute.

A new material

The material behind this work, known as rhombohedral pentalayer graphene, was discovered two years ago by physicists led by Ju. "We found a goldmine, and every scoop is revealing something new," says Ju, who is also affiliated with MIT's Materials Research Laboratory.

In a Nature Nanotechnology paper last October Ju and colleagues reported the discovery of three important properties arising from rhombohedral graphene. For example, they showed that it could be topological, or allow the unimpeded movement of electrons around the edge of the material but not through the middle. That resulted in a superhighway, but required the application of a large magnetic field some tens of thousands times stronger than the Earth's magnetic field.

In the current work, the team reports creating the superhighway without any magnetic field.

Tonghang Han, an MIT graduate student in physics, is a co-first author of the paper. "We are not the first to discover this general phenomenon, but we did so in a very different system. And compared to previous systems, ours is simpler and also supports more electron channels," explains Ju. "Other materials can only support one lane of traffic on the edge of the material. We suddenly bumped it up to five."

Additional co-first authors of the paper who contributed equally to the work are Zhengguang Lu and Yuxuan Yao. Lu is a postdoctoral associate in the Materials Research Laboratory. Yao conducted the work as a visiting undergraduate student from Tsinghua University. Other authors are MIT Professor Liang Fu of physics; Jixiang Yang and Junseok Seo, both graduate students in MIT physics; Chiho Yoon and Fan Zhang of the University of Texas at Dallas; and Kenji Watanabe and Takashi Taniguchi of the National Institute for Materials Science in Japan.

How it works

Pencil lead, or graphite, is composed of graphene, a single layer of carbon atoms arranged in hexagons resembling a honeycomb structure. Rhombohedral graphene is composed of five layers of graphene stacked in a specific overlapping order.

Ju and colleagues isolated rhombohedral graphene thanks to a novel microscope Ju built at MIT in 2021 that can quickly and relatively inexpensively determine a variety of important characteristics of a material at the nanoscale. Pentalayer rhombohedral stacked graphene is only a few billionths of a meter thick.

In the current work, the team tinkered with the original system, adding a layer of tungsten disulfide (WS2). "The interaction between the WS2 and the pentalayer rhombohedral graphene resulted in this five-lane superhighway that operates at zero magnetic field," says Ju.

Comparison to superconductivity

The phenomenon that the Ju group discovered in rhombohedral graphene that allows electrons to travel with no resistance at zero magnetic field is known as the quantum anomalous Hall effect. Most people are more familiar with superconductivity, a completely different phenomenon that does the same thing but happens in very different materials.

Ju notes that although superconductors were discovered in the 1910s, it took some 100 years of research to coax the system to work at the higher temperatures necessary for applications. "And the world record is still well below room temperature," he notes.

Similarly, the rhombohedral graphene superhighway currently operates at about 2 Kelvin, or -456 Fahrenheit. "It will take a lot of effort to elevate the temperature, but as physicists, our job is to provide the insight; a different way for realizing this [phenomenon]," Ju says.

The discoveries involving rhombohedral graphene came as a result of painstaking research that wasn't guaranteed to work. "We tried many recipes over many months," says Han, "so it was very exciting when we cooled the system to a very low temperature and [a five-lane superhighway operating at zero magnetic field] just popped out."

Ju say, "It's very exciting to be the first to discover a phenomenon in a new system, especially in a material that we uncovered."

More information: Tonghang Han et al, Large quantum anomalous Hall effect in spin-orbit proximitized rhombohedral graphene, Science (2024). DOI: 10.1126/science.adk9749

Provided by Materials Research Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

This story was originally published on Phys.org. Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest sci-tech news updates.

OTHER NEWS

8 minutes ago

Reese Witherspoon fans are left stunned to learn the actress's REAL name - as even her close friend Nicole Kidman admits she had NO idea the starlet had another moniker

8 minutes ago

Awkward moment TV reporter thinks she's interviewing former NFL star... only for him to tell her he's not!

8 minutes ago

The staggering number of protest votes against Biden in the primaries is revealed in another warning sign for the 2024 election

9 minutes ago

Lawsuit filed over Wisconsin’s ban on guns near water

9 minutes ago

Strike looms for border workers if mediation doesn't deliver deal

9 minutes ago

Yankees vs. Dodgers: What to know with Aaron Judge facing Yoshinobu Yamamoto in potential World Series preview

9 minutes ago

5 Realistics And 5 Unrealistic NBA Stars The Knicks Could Land In 2024 Offseason

9 minutes ago

LeBron James Sends Doris Burke Emotional Message For Making NBA Finals History

9 minutes ago

Soccer-Meunier backs Casteels as Courtois replacement

9 minutes ago

NBA Finals: Boston Celtics, Dallas Mavericks honor Bill Walton before Game 1

9 minutes ago

YouTube announces new restrictions on gun videos

9 minutes ago

'Worrying signs' for Ukraine if Trump wins election

9 minutes ago

Biden apologises to Zelensky for US weapons delay that let Russia advance

9 minutes ago

Charles Barkley on TNT Possibly Losing the NBA

13 minutes ago

Edmonton Oilers and Florida Panthers prepare to square off in Stanley Cup final

15 minutes ago

Thousands of hens to be culled as flu hits fifth farm

15 minutes ago

Oceans can no longer protect America

15 minutes ago

Elon Musk's Supercomputer Plans Raise Questions

15 minutes ago

Shelter Staff Rush to Save Tiny 1-Pound Puppy Brought in 'Unresponsive'

15 minutes ago

'Atlas' Gives J.Lo a Big Win as Netflix Film Tops Streaming Chart

15 minutes ago

“Everyone got attached to her, but she is a generic NPC!”: Todd Howard Can’t Fathom Skyrim Fanboys Falling in Love With One NPC, Said Fallout Characters are Superior

15 minutes ago

Crime thriller None Of This Is True is coming to Netflix - and it's one for Baby Reindeer fans

15 minutes ago

Boss of Magners maker C&C steps down after overseeing accounting failures

15 minutes ago

Avoid alcohol on flights, say German scientists

15 minutes ago

Chelsea: England star Conor Gallagher free to discuss transfer during Euro 2024

15 minutes ago

‘There are empty-headed ones among priests too': Kerala CM

15 minutes ago

United Airlines starts serving passengers personalized ads on seatback screens

15 minutes ago

Gloucester's Zach Mercer considers making return to France after being given a tour of the Toulon training centre ahead of potential move in 2025

15 minutes ago

Video: Trump lavishes love on 'wonderful wife' Melania and 'great kid' Barron as he opens up for the first time on devastating impact of porn star hush money trial on his family

15 minutes ago

Video: Trump reveals what he thinks happened when Biden bizarrely bent down during his speech in France: 'Something happened and it's not good'

15 minutes ago

Video: Biden says heroes killed on D-Day and troops who fought the Nazis would want America to stand up to Putin in speech on cliff where Rangers died liberating Europe

19 minutes ago

Women’s cycle team able to continue Tour of Britain despite overnight theft of bikes

19 minutes ago

Belarus says it will investigate a Polish soldier's death if Warsaw sends information

19 minutes ago

Mexico's president vows to press ahead with changes to Constitution despite market nervousness

19 minutes ago

Former Trump aides Mark Meadows, Mike Roman plead not guilty in Arizona fake electors case

19 minutes ago

Russia jails French citizen detained on charges of collecting military data

19 minutes ago

Hundreds of asylum-seekers are camped out near Seattle. There's a vacant motel next door

19 minutes ago

Alex Jones asks to convert personal bankruptcy into a liquidation to pay Sandy Hook families

21 minutes ago

Harry Maguire breaks silence and points blame for missing out on England's Euro 2024 squad

21 minutes ago

Trump Is Thirsting for Revenge. Some of His Allies Try to Claim It's Fake News