Described in the journal Nano Letters, the breakthrough follows four years of persistent experimentation and has culminated in the fabrication of a unique atomic-scale structure. The team engineered a nanoscopic sandwich, fusing layers of dysprosium titanate and pyrochlore iridate. Dysprosium titanate is known for its role in nuclear reactors and its ability to support magnetic monopole-like particles, while pyrochlore iridate is a magnetic semimetal prized for its rare electronic and magnetic characteristics.
Both compounds challenge traditional models of quantum behavior, making them notoriously difficult to integrate. Yet researchers successfully brought them together in a single, coherent structure. At the core of this innovation is the interface between the two materials, an area scientists expect will reveal entirely new quantum interactions.
"This work provides a new way to design entirely new artificial two-dimensional quantum materials, with the potential to push quantum technologies and provide deeper insight into their fundamental properties in ways that were previously impossible," said Jak Chakhalian, Claud Lovelace Endowed Professor of Experimental Physics at Rutgers and lead investigator on the project.
Chakhalian and his collaborators delve into a realm governed by quantum mechanics, where matter exhibits both wave-like and particle-like traits. These properties underpin key technologies, including MRI systems, transistors, and lasers.
The professor credited substantial contributions from Rutgers students Michael Terilli and Tsung-Chi Wu, both PhD candidates, and Dorothy Doughty, a 2024 graduate who joined the project as an undergraduate. Materials scientist Mikhail Kareev also played a central role in developing the synthesis method, alongside doctoral graduate Fangdi Wen.
Achieving the layered quantum structure required not just ingenuity but also new instrumentation. The team designed and built Q-DiP, or the quantum phenomena discovery platform, in 2023. This device integrates two lasers, one providing infrared heating and another enabling atomic-scale layering, allowing materials to be assembled and studied at near absolute zero.
"To the best of our knowledge, this probe is unique in the U.S. and represents a breakthrough as an instrumental advance," Chakhalian said.
One half of the newly engineered sandwich, dysprosium titanate, also called spin ice, features magnetic properties that mimic the structure of frozen water. This configuration gives rise to magnetic monopoles, particles that resemble theoretical magnets with only one pole. Though never observed freely in nature, such monopoles can emerge inside spin ice through quantum interactions.
On the other side, pyrochlore iridate hosts Weyl fermions, exotic particles theorized in 1929 and observed in crystal structures only in recent years. These particles behave like massless light-speed travelers, spinning either left or right. Their robust electronic traits make them resistant to disruption, which is ideal for applications in advanced electronics.
By merging these two remarkable materials, researchers have created a new platform for exploring stable and unusual quantum states. Such states are critical for developing qubits in quantum computers and for refining quantum sensors.
"This study is a big step forward in material synthesis and could significantly impact the way we create quantum sensors and advances spintronic devices," Chakhalian said.
Quantum computing harnesses the peculiarities of quantum theory to solve problems that overwhelm classical computers. Qubits, the building blocks of these machines, can exist in multiple configurations simultaneously, enabling vastly more complex processing.
The exceptional properties of this hybrid material could help stabilize such quantum states, a key challenge in quantum information science. Once matured, these technologies are expected to transform sectors from medicine and finance to manufacturing and artificial intelligence.
Research Report:Epitaxial Stabilization of a Pyrochlore Interface between Weyl Semimetal and Spin Ice
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