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Quantum Coherence Possible in Incommensurate Electronic Systems
Researchers at the University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign have demonstrated that quantum coherence
is possible in electronic systems that are incommensurate,
thereby removing one obstacle in the development of
quantum devices.
Electronic effects in thin films and at interfaces
lie at the heart of modern solid-state electronic technology.
As device dimensions shrink toward the nanoscale, quantum
coherence and interference phenomena become increasingly
important.
“At quantum dimensions, quantum mechanics says
device components will couple together and act in a
concerted manner, where everything affects everything
else,” said Tai-Chang Chiang, a professor of physics
and a researcher at the university’s Frederick
Seitz Materials Research Laboratory. “Most scientists
assume that electronic layers must be commensurate,
so electrons will flow without being diverted or scattered.”
In fact, however, most material interfaces are incommensurate
as a result of differences in crystal sizes, symmetries
or atomic spacing. Random scattering of electrons was
thought to destroy quantum coherence in such systems
at the nanoscale.
Now, by studying electron fringe structure in silver
films on highly doped silicon substrates, Chiang and
his research group show that even when electronic layers
are incommensurate, they can still be coherent.
In work performed at the Synchrotron Radiation Center
at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, the researchers
grew atomically uniform silver films on highly doped
n-type silicon substrates. Then they used a technique
called angle-resolved photoemission to examine the fine-structured
electronic fringes.
Although the silver films and silicon substrates are
lattice mismatched and incommensurate, the wave functions
are compatible and can be matched over the interface
plane, Chiang said. The resulting state is coherent
throughout the entire system.
The fringes the scientists recorded correspond to electronic
states extending over the silver film as a quantum well
and reaching into the silicon substrate as a quantum
slope, with the two parts coherently coupled through
an incommensurate interface structure.
“An important conclusion drawn from the present
study is that coherent wave function engineering, as
is traditionally carried out in lattice-matched epitaxial
systems, is possible for incommensurate systems,”
the researchers wrote, “which can substantially
broaden the selection of materials useful for coherent
device architecture.”
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