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

Advanced light source provides a new look at vanadium dioxide

2013-10-23
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Lynn Yarris
lcyarris@lbl.gov
510-486-5375
DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Advanced light source provides a new look at vanadium dioxide

Graphene may command the lion's share of attention but it is not the only material generating buzz in the electronics world. Vanadium dioxide is one of the few known materials that acts like an insulator at low temperatures but like a metal at warmer temperatures starting around 67 degrees Celsius. This temperature-driven metal-insulator transition, the origin of which is still intensely debated, in principle can be induced by the application of an external electric field. That could yield faster and much more energy efficient electronic devices.

"If the origin of this metal-insulator transition is electronic, the application of an electric field should trigger the transition on a picosecond or faster time-scale," says Nagaphani Aetukuri at the IBM-Stanford Spintronic Science and Applications Center (SpinAps). "This would be the basis for an ultrafast electronic switch, in which devices would be activated so quickly that very little energy would be lost through dissipation."

To determine the origin of the metal-insulator transition of vanadium dioxide, Aetukuri and a collaboration of researchers led by Stuart Parkin, of SpinAps and the IBM Almaden Research Center and Hermann Dürr of the SLAC National Laboratory, studied thin films of the material at Berkeley Lab's Advanced Light Source (ALS). Using ALS beamline 4.0.2, an undulator beamline that can provide soft X-rays with variable linear polarization, they performed a series of strain-, polarization- and temperature-dependent X-ray absorption spectroscopy tests, in conjunction with X-ray diffraction and electrical transport measurements.

"Our results outlined the electronic properties that govern the metal-insulator transitions in vanadium dioxide and identified for the first time the respective roles of the Pi-symmetry and delta-symmetry electron orbitals," Aetukuri says. "We believe that the metallic phase of vanadium dioxide can be stabilized by populating the Pi-Symmetry orbitals, which means that engineering devices on a nanoscale that can selectively transfer electrons to the Pi-symmetry orbitals should trigger an insulator to metal transition."

This study was made possible by the X-ray beams at ALS beamline 4.0.2, which penetrated the vanadium dioxide thin films to a depth of about five nanometers, providing a bulk-sensitive probe with minimal effects from surface adsorbates.

Elke Arenholz, an ALS scientist who manages beamline 4.0.2, explains. "It was crucial for the experiment to be performed at a beamline where the orientation of the beam could be changed from parallel to perpendicular without moving the sample. Moreover, beamline 4.0.2 also provided the stability and accuracy needed to measure nanoscale effects."



INFORMATION:

The results of this research have been reported in the journal Nature Physics in a paper titled "Control of the Metal-Insulator Transition in Vanadium Dioxide by Modifying Orbital Occupancy." Aetukuri is the lead author, Parkin is the corresponding author.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Gravitational waves 'know' how black holes grow

2013-10-23
Gravitational waves 'know' how black holes grow Supermassive black holes: every large galaxy's got one. But how did they grow so big? A paper in the journal Science pits the front-running ideas about the growth of supermassive black holes against observational data — a limit ...

There's gold in them thar trees

2013-10-23
There's gold in them thar trees Eucalyptus trees - or gum trees as they are know - are drawing up gold particles from the earth via their root system and depositing it their leaves and branches. Scientists from CSIRO made the discovery and have published their findings ...

The hitchhiker antigen: Cause for concern?

2013-10-23
The hitchhiker antigen: Cause for concern? Since antibodies first attained prominence as research reagents in modern biological science labs, researchers have been perplexed as to why one production lot can differ significantly from the next, ...

How are Open Access and MOOCS disrupting the academic community in different ways?

2013-10-23
How are Open Access and MOOCS disrupting the academic community in different ways? New article in SAGE Open compares and contrasts the disruptive tensions of open-access publishing with MOOCs Los Angeles, CA (October 23, 2013) Supporters of open academic content ...

New eye treatment effective in laboratory tests

2013-10-23
New eye treatment effective in laboratory tests Promising new approach may lead to treatments for common eye diseases like neovascular macular degeneration and diabetic retinopathy LA JOLLA, CA – October 23, 2013 – A promising technique for treating human eye disease ...

Changes in epigenetic DNA functions reveal how diabetes predisposes individuals to Alzheimer's

2013-10-23
Changes in epigenetic DNA functions reveal how diabetes predisposes individuals to Alzheimer's Mount Sinai researchers hope to exploit findings to develop novel preventive and treatment strategies for Alzheimer's disease New ...

Swiss private banking in clinch with high cost level

2013-10-23
Swiss private banking in clinch with high cost level For the international wealth management industry, 2012 was a more benign year than the harsh 2011. Due to favorable stock and bond markets the volumes of managed funds increased, though not returning to pre-crisis ...

The molecular clock of the common buzzard

2013-10-23
The molecular clock of the common buzzard Bielefeld biologists reveal the influence of genes on dispersal behavior This news release is available in German. Be it hibernation or the routes of migratory birds: all animal behaviour that is subject to annual ...

Nanopore opens new cellular doorway for drug transport

2013-10-23
Nanopore opens new cellular doorway for drug transport A living cell is built with barriers to keep things out – and researchers are constantly trying to find ways to smuggle molecules in.‬ ‪Professor Giovanni Maglia (Biochemistry, Molecular and Structural ...

New software traces origins of genetic disorders 20 times more accurately

2013-10-23
New software traces origins of genetic disorders 20 times more accurately In a bioinformatics breakthrough, iMinds – STADIUS – KU Leuven researchers have successfully applied advanced artificial intelligence to enable the automated analysis of huge amounts of ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Highly stable self-rectifying memristor arrays: Enabling reliable neuromorphic computing via multi-state regulation

Composite superionic electrolytes for pressure-less solid-state batteries achieved by continuously perpendicularly aligned 2D pathways

Exploring why some people may prefer alcohol over other rewards

How expectations about artificial sweeteners may affect their taste

Ultrasound AI receives FDA De Novo clearance for delivery date AI technology

Amino acid residue-driven nanoparticle targeting of protein cavities beyond size complementarity

New AI algorithm enables scientific monitoring of "blue tears"

Insufficient sleep among US adolescents across behavioral risk groups

Long COVID and recovery among US adults

Trends in poverty and birth outcomes in the US

Heterogeneity of treatment effects of GLP-1 RAs for weight loss in adults

Within-person association between daily screen use and sleep in youth

Low-dose lithium for mild cognitive impairment

Catheter ablation and oral anticoagulation for secondary stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation

A new theory of brain development

Pilot clinical trial suggests low dose lithium may slow verbal memory decline

Bioprinting muscle that knows how to align its cells just as in the human body

A hair-thin fiber can read the chemistry of a single drop of body fluid

SwRI develops magnetostrictive probe for safer, more cost-effective storage tank inspections

National report supports measurement innovation to aid commercial fusion energy and enable new plasma technologies

Mount Sinai, Uniformed Services University join forces to predict and prevent diseases before they start

Science of fitting in: Do best friends or popular peers shape teen behavior?

USF study: Gag grouper are overfished in the Gulf; this new tool could help

New study from Jeonbuk National University finds current climate pledges may miss Paris targets

Theoretical principles of band structure manipulation in strongly correlated insulators with spin and charge perturbations

A CNIC study shows that the heart can be protected during chemotherapy without reducing antitumor efficacy

Mayo Clinic study finds single dose of non-prescribed Adderall raises blood pressure and heart rate in healthy young adults

Engineered immune cells show promise against brain metastases in preclinical study

Improved EV battery technology will outmatch degradation from climate change

AI cancer tools risk “shortcut learning” rather than detecting true biology

[Press-News.org] Advanced light source provides a new look at vanadium dioxide