PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Scientists find asymmetry in topological insulators

Surprising findings bolster case for energy efficient quantum computer

2013-08-14
(Press-News.org) New research shows that a class of materials being eyed for the next generation of computers behaves asymmetrically at the sub-atomic level. This research is a key step toward understanding the topological insulators that may have the potential to be the building blocks of a super-fast quantum computer that could run on almost no electricity.

Scientists from the Energy Department's National Renewable Energy Laboratory contributed first-principles calculations and co-authored the paper "Mapping the Orbital Wavefunction of the Surface States in 3-D Topological Insulators," which appears in the current issue of Nature Physics. A topological insulator is a material that behaves as an insulator in its interior but whose surface contains conducting states.

In the paper, researchers explain how the materials act differently above and below the Dirac point and how the orbital and spin texture of topological insulator states switched exactly at the Dirac point. The Dirac point refers to the place where two conical forms – one representing energy, the other momentum – come together at a point. In the case of topological insulators, the orbital and spin textures of the sub-atomic particles switch precisely at the Dirac point. The phenomenon occurs because of the relationship between electrons and their holes in a semiconductor.

This research is a key step toward understanding the topological insulators like bismuth selenide (Bi2Se3), bismuth telluride (Bi2Te3), antimony telluride (Sb2Te3), and mercury telluride (HgTe) that may have the potential to be the building blocks of a quantum computer, a machine with the potential of loading the information from a data center into the space of a laptop and processing data much faster than today's best supercomputers.

"The energy efficiency should be much better," said NREL Scientist Jun-Wei Luo, one of the co-authors. Instead of being confined to the on-and-off switches of the binary code, a quantum computer will act more like the human brain, seeing something but imagining much more, he said. "This is entirely different technology."

Topological Insulators are of great interest currently for their potential to use their exotic properties to transmit information on electron spins with virtually no expenditure of electricity, said Luo. NREL's Xiuwen Zhang is another co-author as are scientists from University of Colorado, Rutgers University, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, and the Colorado School of Mines. Luo and Zhang work in NREL's Center for Inverse Design, one of 46 Energy Frontier Research Centers established around the nation by the Energy Department's Office of Science in 2009 to accelerate basic research on energy.

The finding of orbital texture switch at Dirac point implies the novel backwards spin texture -- right-handed instead of left-handed, in the short-hand of physicists -- comes from the coupling of spin texture to the orbital texture for the conserved quantity is total angular momentum of the wave function, not spin. The new findings, supported partly by observations taken at the Advanced Light Source at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, were surprising and bolster the potential of the topological insulators.

"In this paper, we computed and measured the profile of the topological states and found that the orbital texture of topological states switches from tangential to radial across the Dirac point," Zhang said. Equally surprising, they found that phenomenon wasn't a function of a unique material, but was common to all topological insulators.

The topological insulators probably won't be practical for solar cells, because at the surface they contain no band gap. A band gap – the gap between when a material is in a conducting state and an inert state – is essential for solar cells to free photons and have them turn into energy carrying electrons.

But the topological insulators could be very useful for other kinds of electronics-spintronics. The electrons of topological insulators will self-polarize at opposite device edges. "We usually drive the electron in a particular direction to spatially separate the spin-up and spin-down electrons, but this exotic property suggests that electrons as a group don't have to move," Luo said. "The initial idea is we don't need any current to polarize the electron spins. We may be able to develop a spin quantum computer and spin quantum computations."

In theory, an entire data center could operate with virtually no electricity. "That's probably more in theory than reality," Luo said, noting that other components of the center likely would still need electricity. "But it would be far more energy efficient." And the steep drop in electricity would also mean a steep drop in the number of coolers and fans needed to cool things down.

Luo cautioned that this is still basic science. The findings may have limited application to renewable energy, but Luo noted that another of NREL's key missions is energy efficiency.

NREL is the U.S. Department of Energy's primary national laboratory for renewable energy and energy efficiency research and development. NREL is operated for the Energy Department by the Alliance for Sustainable Energy, LLC.

### Visit NREL online at http://www.nrel.gov


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

University of Tennessee professors study dilemmas in sustaining red light camera programs

2013-08-14
It's a common driving predicament: As you approach the intersection, the light is yellow. Do you hit the brakes or face a red light camera fine? Some municipalities engineer their traffic signals to force drivers into this situation in an effort to generate revenue from the cameras. Professors at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, have analyzed this issue to determine if traffic control measures intended to boost red light revenue—such as shortening yellow light time or increasing the speed limit on a street—compromise safety. The study by professors Lee Han, ...

AGU journal highlights -- Aug. 13, 2013

2013-08-14
The following highlights summarize research papers that have been recently published in Geophysical Research Letters (GRL), Journal of Geophysical Research-Solid Earth (JGR-B) and Journal of Geophysical Research-Atmospheres (JGR-D). In this release: 1. An earthquake in Japan caused large waves in Norwegian fjords 2. Disposal of Marcellus Shale fracking waste caused earthquakes in Ohio 3. The Arctic is especially sensitive to black carbon emissions from within the region 4. A new metric to help understand Amazon rainforest precipitation 5. Detailed analysis shows ...

Women still less likely to commit corporate fraud

2013-08-14
Women are less likely to take part in corporate crime and fraud even though more women now work in corporations and serve at higher levels of those organizations, according to a team of sociologists. The researchers examined a database of recent corporate frauds and found that women typically were not part of the conspiracy. When women did play a role, it was rarely a significant one. "There has been this view for awhile that women are no more moral than men and that once there was more gender equality in the workforce, there would be more females involved in corporate ...

Disney Researchers use automated analysis to find weakness in soccer coaching strategy

2013-08-14
Investigators at Disney Research, Pittsburgh, are applying artificial intelligence to the analysis of professional soccer and, in one application of the automated technique, have discovered a strategic error often made by coaches of visiting teams. The common wisdom that teams should "win at home and draw away" has encouraged coaches to play less aggressively when their teams are on the road, said Patrick Lucey, a Disney researcher who specializes in automatically measuring human behavior. Yet the computer analysis suggests that it is this defensive-oriented strategy, ...

Toxicologist says NAS panel 'misled the world' when adopting radiation exposure guidelines

2013-08-14
AMHERST, Mass. – In two recently published peer-reviewed articles, toxicologist Edward Calabrese of the University of Massachusetts Amherst describes how regulators came to adopt the linear no threshold (LNT) dose-response approach to ionizing radiation exposure in the 1950s, which was later generalized to chemical carcinogen risk assessment. He also offers further evidence to support his earlier assertions that two geneticists deliberately suppressed evidence to prevent the U.S. National Academy of Sciences (NAS) from considering an alternative, threshold model, for ...

Researchers slow light to a crawl in liquid crystal matrix

2013-08-14
WASHINGTON, Aug. 13, 2013—Light traveling in a vacuum is the Universe's ultimate speed demon, racing along at approximately 300,000 kilometers per second. Now scientists have found an effective new way to put a speed bump in light's path. Reported today in The Optical Society's (OSA) open-access journal Optics Express, researchers from France and China embedded dye molecules in a liquid crystal matrix to throttle the group velocity of light back to less than one billionth of its top speed. The team says the ability to slow light in this manner may one day lead to new technologies ...

ORNL finding goes beyond surface of oxide films

2013-08-14
OAK RIDGE, Tenn., Aug. 13, 2013 – Better batteries, catalysts, electronic information storage and processing devices are among potential benefits of an unexpected discovery made by Oak Ridge National Laboratory scientists using samples isolated from the atmosphere. Researchers at the Department of Energy lab learned that key surface properties of complex oxide films are unaffected by reduced levels of oxygen during fabrication – an unanticipated finding with possible implications for the design of functional complex oxides used in a variety of consumer products, said ...

Even for cows, less can be more

2013-08-14
URBANA, Ill. – With little research on how nutrition affects reproductive performance in dairy cows, it is generally believed that a cow needs a higher energy intake before calving. Research by University of Illinois scientists challenges this accepted wisdom. Animal sciences researcher Phil Cardoso said that this line of research was the result of an "accident." Students in animal sciences professor James Drackley's group compared cows fed before calving with diets containing the recommended energy levels to cows fed reduced energy diets. They found that the cows fed ...

UCSB anthropologists study testosterone spikes in non-competitive activities

2013-08-14
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– The everyday physical activities of an isolated group of forager-farmers in central Bolivia are providing valuable information about how industrialization and its associated modern amenities may impact health and wellness. Studying short-term spikes in the testosterone levels of Tsimane men, UC Santa Barbara anthropologists Ben Trumble and Michael Gurven have found that the act of chopping down trees –– a physically demanding task that is critical to successful farming and food production –– results in greater increases in testosterone than ...

Prostate cancer screening: New data support watchful waiting

2013-08-14
PHILADELPHIA —Prostate cancer aggressiveness may be established when the tumor is formed and not alter with time, according to a study published in Cancer Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research. Researchers found that after the introduction of widespread prostate-specific antigen (PSA) screening, the proportion of patients diagnosed with advanced-stage cancers dropped by more than six-fold in 22 years, but the proportion diagnosed with high Gleason grade cancers did not change substantially. This suggests that low-grade prostate cancers do ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

OET inaugural cover | 30 years of nanoimprint lithography: Leading the new era of nanomanufacturing

Metalens evolution: From individual devices to integrated arrays

Advancing disaster response with the EBD dataset

Putting solar panels in space could aid Europe’s net-zero transition

Ambient documentation technologies reduce physician burnout and restore ‘joy’ in medicine

Solar panels in space could cut Europe’s renewable energy needs by 80%

Computational approach meets biology to connect neural progenitor cells with human disorders

GLP-1 receptor agonists and cancer risk in adults with obesity

Impact of a weight loss intervention on 1-year weight change in women with stage II/III breast cancer

Novel tool helps identify key targets to strengthen CAR NK cell therapies

New RP-HPLC method for orlistat analysis validated

How AI will transform mental health support for patients with breast cancer

First observations by the Total Anthropogenic and Natural emissions mapping SpectrOmeter-3 (TANSO-3) onboard the Global Observing SATellite for Greenhouse gases and Water cycle “IBUKI GW” (GOSAT-GW)

Optimizing how cells self-organize

Impact of cancer on forensic DNA methylation age estimation

Researchers use photonic origami to fold glass into microscopic 3D optical devices

Dr. Matthew Greenblatt awarded Paul-Gallin Trailblazer Prize for bone stem cell discoveries

Natural products used as disinfectants in prosthodontics and oral implantology

A multisensor approach to accurate snow water equivalent retrieval from space

Researchers find ways to improve liquid hydrogen tank efficiency

New era in transthyretin amyloidosis: From stabilizers to gene editing

Cumulative hepatitis B surface antigen/hepatitis B virus DNA ratio in immune-tolerant hepatitis B patients

Increased patient-provider communication, education about COPD needed to improve patient care

Nation’s leading breast health advocate receives Benjamin Spock Award for Compassion in Medicine

Chung-Ang University researchers demonstrate paper electrode-based crawling soft robots

New tracer could enable surgeons to see and hear prostate cancer

One catalyst, two reactions: Toward more efficient chemical synthesis

Regenerative agriculture highlighted as a transformative approach to ecological farming and soil recovery

SLAS Technology unveils AI-powered diagnostics & future lab tech

Hospital stays among migrants in Austria much lower than among Austrians

[Press-News.org] Scientists find asymmetry in topological insulators
Surprising findings bolster case for energy efficient quantum computer