Condensed Matter Experiment Faculty Robert Anderson Professor S
Condensed Matter Experiment Faculty Robert Anderson, Professor S. M. Bhagat, Professor Dennis Drew, Professor Ellen Williams, Professor Michael Fuhrer (with CSR), Assistant Professor Min Ouyang, Assistant Professor Robert Park, Professor (APS – “What’s New”) Richard Webb, Professor (with CSR) (on leave) Affiliated Faculty (LPS) D. Romero B. Kane K. Schwab B. Barker
Condensed Matter Experiment Faculty Robert Anderson, Professor R S. M. Bhagat, Professor T Dennis Drew, Professor R Ellen Williams, Professor R Michael Fuhrer (with CSR), Assistant Professor (Hired 1999) Min Ouyang, Assistant Professor (Hired 2004) Robert Park, Professor (APS – “What’s New”) Richard Webb, Professor (with CSR) (on leave) Affiliated Faculty (LPS) D. Romero B. Kane K. Schwab B. Barker
Condensed Matter Experiment US News ranking: 10
Outline Quantum properties at the nanoscale to mesoscale (CME, CSR, LPS; Anderson, Drew, Lobb, Wellstood, Webb, Ouyang, Fuhrer, Kane, Schwab, Barker) Applied Statistical Mechanics: properties at the nanoscale (CME, IPST; Williams, Weeks, Das Sarma, Einstein) Low-Dimensional Interfaces: Organic and Inorganic materials, molecular electronics (CME, Chemistry; Fuhrer, Lee, Reutt-Robey, De. Shong, Ouyang, Sita, Williams) Nanophysics: Nanoscale imaging, devices, assembly (CME, EE, Materials, LPS; Drew, Fuhrer, Gomez, Lee, Phaneuf, Williams) Magnetic Oxides: Dilute magnetic oxides, multiferroics and high TC superconductivity (CME, CSR, Materials, NIST, Rutgers); Bhagat, Drew, Greene, Ogale, Takeuchi, Venkatesen, Lynn, Cheong)
Maryland Infrastructure • NSF-Materials Research Science and Engineering Center ² Interdisciplinary, competitively funded research center, Collaborative research programs; Shared Experimental Facilities, Educational and Industrial Outreach Programs. Director: Ellen Williams • Center for Superconductivity Research ² Established as a state-supported research laboratory in 1988. Director, Prof. R. Greene. • Institute for Physical Science and Technology ² State-supported interdisciplinary research institute. Strengths in nonlinear dynamics, statistical mechanics, applied mathematics, space physics. Director, R. Roy. • Maryland Center for Integrated Nano-Science and Engineering/ Kim Building ² State-supported research center to for research and applications of nanotechnology. Director: G. Rubloff • Laboratory for Ion Beam Research and Applications ² Focused Ion Beam research and application • Laboratory for Physical Science ² Neighboring Do. D Laboratory with 20+ year history of support for condensed Matter Physics at UMD. Director: Bernadette Preston
History: UMD Nanotechnology Flagship Physics Liaison - E. Williams (1998 -present) + M. Fuhrer (2004 -present) • 1998: Chair- Steve Wallace, Acting Dean - John Osborne ² ² Proposal in parallel with Engineering proposal. Requested infrastructure support + 2 faculty hires Result - Michael Fuhrer recruited in 1999 • 1999: Chair - Jordan Goodman, Dean - Steve Halperin ² ² Proposal submitted by Engineering with one hire in Physics endorsed by CMPS Result – not approved • November 2000: Chair - Jordan Goodman, Dean - Steve Halperin endorse proposal for three Nanotechnology hires in CMPS to be included in joint Engineering/CMPS Initiative. Search is initiated, then cancelled by the Dean. • Fall 2003: University provides a new line in physics to be used for a nanoscience hire ² Result: Min Ouyang hired in 2004 • 2003 -2004 IPST undertaking facilities renovation in preparation for two experimental biophysics hires. Candidates selected in biophysics search (chair: E. Williams) to be presented to Physics faculty March 10. • 2004 Dean of Engineering - Nariman Farvardin proposes a major initiative in Nanoscience/Nanotechnology to be coordinated through IREAP in conjunction with new Nanofabrication facility in Kim Bldg. P. O’Shea appointed director of Nanoscience and G. Rubloff director of M-CINSE (Maryland Center for Integrated Nanoscience and Engineering).
http: //www. physics. umd. edu/cal/spevents/nanoscience/index. html
Nanophysics & Devices: LPS Program Overview H. D. Drew, M. S. Fuhrer, S. B. Lee, J. Melngailis, R. J. Phaneuf, E. D. Williams, M. Zachariah Collaborations: P. Abshire, R. Ghodssi, R. Gomez, E. Smela, D. Romero, G. Rubloff • Program focus: Develop and evaluate advanced nano-optical and nano-electronic technologies for sensing and information processing. ² Nano-electronics with carbon nanotubes and innovative nanotube materials (Fuhrer, Lee, Melngailis) ² Nanoparticle-enhanced fluorescence for sensing applications (Phaneuf, Zachariah, Drew) ² Integration of nano-electronics with organic electronics and photocells, etc. onto flexible plastic substrates (Williams) ² Nanoscale optical sensing and nano-antennas (Drew)
Fuhrer Group - Electronic Properties of Carbon Nanotubes Ultra-long nanotubes: • Charge carrier mobility (highest of any semiconductor at RT) • Saturation velocity Nanotube transistors: • Single-electron detection and memory • High-frequency devices Novel Imaging/Fabrication Techniques: • Scanning-Probe microscopies of transport Collaborations: • John Melngailis (ECE) – electron microscopy, electron-beam deposition of metal contacts • Gary Rubloff (Materials) – ALD of metals, high-k dielectrics on nanotubes Funding: NSF, Army Research Lab, Northrop-Grumman T. Dürkop, et al. , Nano Letters 4, 2004
Fuhrer Group - Molecular Electronics • Single-molecule measurements in electromigration-fabricated break junctions • First observation of expected signatures of resonant conduction through a single molecular state: Lorentzian resonance with conductance ~G 0. Collaboration with Larry Sita (Chemistry), Harold Baranger, Weitao Yang (Duke University) Funding: NSF, DOE S. A. Getty, et al. , (submitted to PRL) http: //xxx. lanl. gov/abs/cond-mat/0409433
Fuhrer Group - Other Research “Nanopatches”: Two-dimensional crystals of layered transition-metal dichalcogenides Collaboration with Ellen Williams (Physics) Funding: NSF Ta. S 2 Nanopatch with gold electrodes Thin-film electronics with nanostructured organic materials or carbon nanotube films Collaboration with Ellen Williams (Physics), Sang Bok Lee (Chemistry), Romel Gomez (ECE) Funding: LPS Au Nanotube film bare Si. O 2 Au Nanotube Thin-Film Transistor
Laboratory for Nano. Spintronics PI: Min Ouyang (http: //www 2. physics. umd. edu/~mouyang/) Research Interest: (1) Development of novel synthetic methodologies for low dimensional spin-based hybrid organic-inorganic nanostructures. 5 nm NW-NT heterojunction Carbon SWNT Cd. Se Quantum Dots Nature 399, 48 (1999) Science 292, 650 (2001) Science 301, 580 (2003)
(2) Investigation of fundamental basis for spin-charge interactions and spin transport within nanostructured systems with new experimental techniques such as femtosecond optical spectroscopy, magnetotransport and low temperature scanning probe microscopy. Time resolved Faraday rotation spectroscopy for investigating spin dependent physics in nanostructures Science 301, 580 (2003)
Williams group - statistical mechanics of surface structures Application of direct imaging techniques to determine structural distributions: • equilibrium statistical mechanics • Step free energies • Fluctuation time constants • Size-dependent crossover Nanostructure Evolution: • Predictive evolution based on step unit • Driven Instabilities and patterning Stochastic “predictability”: • Demonstration of first passage phenomena Collaborations: • Theory: Einstein, Weeks, Das. Sarma Funding: NSF, DOE
Williams Group - Electromigration and Noise Fundamental issues of diffusional bias due to electron scattering from internal surfaces • pattern formation - kinetic instabilities • direct observations of fluctuation bias Instrumental/Materials applications: • Development of MFM to observe current crowding directly • Development of UHV nanowire fabrication Correlation of electron transport noise with atomic scale structure Collaborations: • Theory: Philip Rous, UMBC • Experiment: M. Fuhrer, S. B. Lee (Chemistry Funding: NSF, DOE
Williams group - organic electronics Investigation of interface effects as scale thickness and lateral scale of organic device structures • Organic MBE • Nano-transfer print lithography Thin-film electronics with nanostructured organic materials or carbon nanotube films Collaboration with M. Fuhrer (Physics), Janice Reutt-Robey, Sang Bok Lee and Phil De. Shong (Chemistry), Danilo Romero (ECE) Funding: LPS
Drew Group: Oxide Magnetism Probing spin correlations with IR phonons in the strongly frustrated magnet Zn. Cr 2 O 4 The magnetic frustration of Cr ions in corner sharing tetrahedra (the pyrochlore lattice) have leads to a Neel temperature of 12 K despite a Curie-Weise temperature of 390 K. The frustration is broken by a Peierls distortion of the lattice at TN and a triply degenerate IR phonon splits into a singlet and doublet. Softening of the phonon above TN probe spin correlations in the spin liquid state. Sushkov et al. , PRL accepted Collaborations: MRSEC, CSR, Materials, Cheong (Rutgers), Lynn (NIST). Funding: NSF MRSEC
Drew Group: High TC Superconductivity Fermi pockets in underdoped YBa 2 Cu 3 O 6+x deduced from measurements of the Hall effect in the infrared. Rapid growth of H observed in pseudogap state is signature of Fermi pockets. Stripes, “arcs”, Mott transition and other models lead to reduction of H L. Rigal et al. , PRL 93 (2004). ARPES: Nd 2 -x. Cex. Cu. O 4 Armitage, et al. , PRL 87, (2001). Collaborations: Greene (CSR), Gu (Brookhaven), Millis (Columbia). Funding: NSF
Drew Group: Nano-optics High optical throughput NSOM probes have been realized using etched polarization preserving fiber. Applications: florescence imaging, quantum dot spectroscopy, direct writing superconducting circuits. Collaborations: LPS, Materials, Williams, Phaneuf. Funding: LPS
Anderson group Diluted Magnetic Semiconductors A 1 -x. Mx. B Examples: Hg 1 -x. Mnx. Te, Pb 1 -x. Gdx. Te, Ga 1 -x. Mnx. As Properties: 1. Electronic properties influence magnetic properties and vice versa. 2. Large negative magnetoresistance. 3. Controllable bandgaps. Applications: 1. Frequency tunable IR detectors. 2. Avalanche photodiode detectors. 3. Thermoelectric components. 4. Magnetic field detectors. Research Projects: 1. Magnetic contribution to heat capacity. Probe of exchange interactions. 2. MBE-prepared thermoelectric materials. 3. Magnetically tunable IR detectors. Collaborations: Institute of Physics (Warsaw), CSR, LPS, Notre Dame, UMES, Howard U.
Quantum Computing * Josephson Junction Qubits • Present Research: Microwave spectroscopy in coupled Josephson junctions. Investigation of escape rates, isolation schemes and variable coupling approaches. Examine gate operations. Prepare 10 -qubit chips. • Collaborators: CSR, Wellstood, Lobb, Dragt • Funding: LPS
Bhagat Group Ferromagnetic Resonance has been the main focus of the Bhagat group. We began work with single crystals (pure metals & alloys), branched into amorphous alloys (metglasses) and disordered FM’s (…etc), perovskite manganites, Garnets, orthoferrites, and most recently we are concentrating in microwires and nanostructural materials- powders, thin films, multi-layers. Collaborations: groups in Russia and Spain, S. Lofland (Rowan University) and S. Tyagi (Drexel).
Condensed Matter at Laboratory for Physical Sciences Bruce Kane (Visiting Associate Research Scientist Semiconductor base quantum computer Keith Schwab (Adjunct Assistant Professor) Superconductor based quantum computer, Low temperature physics Barry Barker low temperature STM
SET Array for QC Bruce Kane, LPS • Array of Al SETs separately addressable using scanned probe • Randomly doped Si substrate: weak localization measurement of P ddoped layer to measure dopant segregation and diffusion • Application: Spin Quantum Computing in Si
Quantum Properties at the Nanoscale • Quantum Limits of Motion in Nanomechanics – K. Schwab - LPS • Demonstrate the quantum behavior of a nanomechanical oscillator at 10 m. K temperatures. Show the effects of the uncertainty principle, quantized energy, and the existence of superposition • rf SET 10 MHZ resonator • Nanoscale Landscape of Semiconductor Dopants – B. I. Barker - LPS • Probe spatial extent, spectroscopic features and Zeeman splitting of dopants in semiconductors Develop Very-Low Temperature STM for spectroscopic measurment of Zeeeman splitting - test Te/Ga. Asy. ) •
Condensed Matter Experiment • Limiting Issues ² Quality/Quantity of space issues ¬ ¬ ¬ ² Area and quality of laboratory space and space for equipment storage, poor AC and electrical power. Office space for Post-docs, Grad students Poor facilities support: no clear administrative process to initiate laboratory modifications, no recognizable tracking system once process is initiated, PIs waste huge amounts of time dealing with even trivial facilities issues that will be fully paid by grants. Research activities can be delayed for years. Major efforts by outstanding Associate Chair cannot solve problem. Bureaucratic Hurdles ¬ University safety officials are helpful within their limits, but unaware of state-of-the art approaches to safe laboratory practices. Individual faculty member must research any new safety issue on his/her own time, and then spend large effort to convince safety staff that modern approaches are viable. (And then deal with facilities…) …continued
Condensed Matter Experiment • Limiting Issues ² Bureaucratic Hurdles (continued) ¬ ¬ ¬ ² Limited U. support for activities required/encouraged by funding agencies: educational outreach, industrial outreach, recruiting and supporting diverse population of graduate students, outreach to developing countries Research scientist ranks in CMPS barred to laboratory managers even where Ph. D. level expertise is required Repetitive wasteful paperwork/reporting burdens Research Environment/Intellectual Environment ¬ ¬ U. administration slow to recognize (and support faculty in responding to) national science initiatives and directions (e. g. nanoscience, advent of DHS…). Administratively determined priorities and plans poorly communicated to faculty. Multiplication of initiatives, centers, etc. fragments intellectual community. Specific to CM - need to coordinate Biophysics, Nanoscience in CM, IREAP, MCINSE efforts to consolidate intellectual community
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