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

Frustrated magnets -- new experiment reveals clues to their discontent

Frustrated magnets -- new experiment reveals clues to their discontent
2015-04-03
(Press-News.org) An experiment conducted by Princeton researchers has revealed an unlikely behavior in a class of materials called frustrated magnets, addressing a long-debated question about the nature of these discontented quantum materials.

The work represents a surprising discovery that down the road may suggest new research directions for advanced electronics. Published this week in the journal Science, the study also someday may help clarify the mechanism of high-temperature superconductivity, the frictionless transmission of electricity.

The researchers tested the frustrated magnets -- so-named because they should be magnetic at low temperatures but aren't -- to see if they exhibit a behavior called the Hall Effect. When a magnetic field is applied to an electric current flowing in a conductor such as a copper ribbon, the current deflects to one side of the ribbon. This deflection, first observed in 1879 by E.H. Hall, is used today in sensors for devices such as computer printers and automobile anti-lock braking systems.

Because the Hall Effect happens in charge-carrying particles, most physicists thought it would be impossible to see such behavior in non-charged, or neutral, particles like those in frustrated magnets. "To talk about the Hall Effect for neutral particles is an oxymoron, a crazy idea," said N. Phuan Ong, Princeton's Eugene Higgins Professor of Physics.

Nevertheless, some theorists speculated that the neutral particles in frustrated magnets might bend to the Hall rule under extremely cold conditions, near absolute zero, where particles behave according to the laws of quantum mechanics rather than the classical physical laws we observe in our everyday world. Harnessing quantum behavior could enable game-changing innovations in computing and electronic devices.

Ong and colleague Robert Cava, Princeton's Russell Wellman Moore Professor of Chemistry, and their graduate students Max Hirschberger and Jason Krizan decided to see if they could settle the debate and demonstrate conclusively that the Hall Effect exists for frustrated magnets.

To do so, the research team turned to a class of the magnets called pyrochlores. They contain magnetic moments that, at very low temperatures near absolute zero, should line up in an orderly manner so that all of their "spins," a quantum-mechanical property, point in the same direction. Instead, experiments have found that the spins point in random directions. These frustrated materials are also referred to as "quantum spin ice."

"These materials are very interesting because theorists think the tendency for spins to align is still there, but, due to a concept called geometric frustration, the spins are entangled but not ordered," Ong said. Entanglement is a key property of quantum systems that researchers hope to harness for building a quantum computer, which could solve problems that today's computers cannot handle.

A chance conversation in a hallway between Cava and Ong revealed that Cava had the know-how and experimental infrastructure to make such materials. He tasked chemistry graduate student Krizan with growing the crystals while Hirschberger, a graduate student in physics, set up the experiments needed to look for the Hall Effect.

"The main challenge was how to measure the Hall Effect at an extremely low temperature where the quantum nature of these materials comes out," Hirschberger said. The experiments were performed at temperatures of 0.5 degrees Kelvin, and required Hirschberger to resolve temperature differences as small as a thousandth of a degree between opposite edges of a crystal.

To grow the crystals, Krizan first synthesized the material from terbium oxide and titanium oxide in a furnace similar to a kiln. After forming the pyrochlore powder into a cylinder suitable for feeding the crystal growth, Krizan suspended it in a chamber filled with pure oxygen and blasted it with enough focused light from four 1000-Watt halogen light bulbs to heat a small region to 1800 degrees Celsius. The final products were thin, flat transparent or orange slabs about the size of a sesame seed.

To test each crystal, Hirschberger attached tiny gold electrodes to either end of the slab, using microheaters to drive a heat current through the crystal. At such low temperatures, this heat current is analogous to the electric current in the ordinary Hall Effect experiment.

At the same time, he applied a magnetic field in the direction perpendicular to the heat current. To his surprise, he saw that the heat current was deflected to one side of the crystal. He had observed the Hall Effect in a non-magnetic material.

Surprised by the results, Ong suggested that Hirschberger repeat the experiment, this time by reversing the direction of the heat current. If Hirschberger was really seeing the Hall Effect, the current should deflect to the opposite side of the crystal. Reconfiguring the experiment at such low temperatures was not easy, but eventually he demonstrated that the signal did indeed reverse in a manner consistent with the Hall Effect.

"All of us were very surprised because we work and play in the classical, non-quantum world," Ong said. "Quantum behavior can seem very strange, and this is one example where something that shouldn't happen is really there. It really exists."

The use of experiments to probe the quantum behavior of materials is essential for broadening our understanding of fundamental physical properties and the eventual exploitation of this understanding in new technologies, according to Cava. "Every technological advance has a basis in fundamental science through our curiosity about how the world works," he said.

Further experiments on these materials may provide insights into how superconductivity occurs in certain copper-containing materials called cuprates, also known as "high-temperature" superconductors because they work well above the frigid temperatures required for today's superconductors, such as those used in MRI machines.

One of the ideas for how high-temperature superconductivity could occur is based on the possible existence of a particle called the spinon. Theorists, including the Nobel laureate Philip Anderson, Princeton's Joseph Henry Professor of Physics, Emeritus and a senior physicist, and others have speculated that spinons could be the carrier of a heat current in a quantum system such as the one explored in the present study.

Although the team does not claim to have observed the spinon, Ong said that the work could lead in such a direction in the future. "This work sets the stage for hunting the spinon," Ong said. "We have seen its tracks, so to speak."

INFORMATION:

Citation: Max Hirschberger, Jason W. Krizan, R. J. Cava, N. P. Ong. Large thermal Hall conductivity of neutral spin excitations in a frustrated quantum magnet. Science. 10.1126/science.1257340


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Frustrated magnets -- new experiment reveals clues to their discontent Frustrated magnets -- new experiment reveals clues to their discontent 2

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Rice can borrow stronger immunity from other plant species, study shows

2015-04-03
Like most other plants, rice is well equipped with an effective immune system that enables it to detect and fend off disease-causing microbes. But that built-in immunity can be further boosted when the rice plant receives a receptor protein from a completely different plant species, suggests a new study led by UC Davis plant-disease experts. The study findings, which may help increase health and productivity of rice, the staple food for half of the world's population, are reported online in the journal PLOS Pathogens at http://bit.ly/1GJBEQZ. "Our results demonstrate ...

New genetic clues emerge on origin of Hirschsprung's disease

2015-04-03
Genetic studies in humans, zebrafish and mice have revealed how two different types of genetic variations team up to cause a rare condition called Hirschsprung's disease. The findings add to an increasingly clear picture of how flaws in early nerve development lead to poor colon function, which must often be surgically corrected. The study also provides a window into normal nerve development and the genes that direct it. The results appear in the April 2 issue of the American Journal of Human Genetics. About one in every 5,000 babies is born with Hirschsprung's disease, ...

Body's cancer defenses hijacked to make pancreatic and lung cancers more aggressive

2015-04-03
CANCER RESEARCH UK scientists have discovered that a vital self-destruct switch in cells is hijacked - making some pancreatic and non small cell lung cancers more aggressive, according to research published in Cancer Cell today (Thursday)*. The team, from the Cancer Research UK Centre at the UCL (University College London) Cancer Institute, found that mutations in the KRAS gene interferes with protective self-destruct switches, known as TRAIL receptors, which usually help to kill potentially cancerous cells. The research, carried out in cancer cells and mice, shows ...

Possible progress against Parkinson's and good news for stem cell therapies

2015-04-03
Brazilian researchers at D'OR Institute for Research and Education (IDOR) and Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ) have taken what they describe as an important step toward using the implantation of stem cell-generated neurons as a treatment for Parkinson's disease. Using an FDA approved substance for treating stomach cancer, Rehen and colleagues were able to grow dopamine-producing neurons derived from embryonic stem cells that remained healthy and functional for as long as 15 months after implantation into mice, restoring motor function without forming tumors. Parkinson's, ...

Doctor at Rhode Island Hospital develops Ebola virus diagnostic tool

2015-04-03
PROVIDENCE, R.I. - Adam C. Levine, M.D., an emergency medicine physician at Rhode Island Hospital and The Miriam Hospital who treated Ebola-infected patients in Liberia last year, used his field experience to create a tool to determine the likelihood that patients presenting with Ebola symptoms will actually carry the virus. His research was published in the Annals of Emergency Medicine today. Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) has affected 24,000 persons during the current epidemic, which is the largest recorded outbreak of EVD in history. Over 10,000 people have died in West ...

Cancer genes turned off in deadly brain cancer

2015-04-03
Scientists use small molecule that suppresses cancer-causing genes in glioblastoma Nanotechnology crosses blood-brain barrier to reach tumor cells Approach has potential to silence genes in other cancers and genetic diseases CHICAGO --- Northwestern Medicine scientists have identified a small RNA molecule called miR-182 that can suppress cancer-causing genes in mice with glioblastoma mulitforme (GBM), a deadly and incurable type of brain tumor. While standard chemotherapy drugs damage DNA to stop cancer cells from reproducing, the new method stops the source ...

Mayo Clinic researchers combine common genetic variants to improve breast cancer

2015-04-03
ROCHESTER, Minn. -- Recent large-scale genomic analyses have uncovered dozens of common genetic variants that are associated with breast cancer. Each variant, however, contributes only a tiny amount to a person's overall risk of developing the disease. A Mayo Clinic-led team of international researchers has now combined 77 of these common genetic variants into a single risk factor that can be used to improve the identification of women with an elevated risk of breast cancer. This factor, known as a polygenic risk score, was built from the genetic data of more than 67,000 ...

Gender difference in moral judgments rooted in emotion, not reasoning, study finds

2015-04-03
If a time machine was available, would it be right to kill Adolf Hitler when he was still a young Austrian artist to prevent World War II and save millions of lives? Should a police officer torture an alleged bomber to find hidden explosives that could kill many people at a local cafe? When faced with such dilemmas, men are typically more willing to accept harmful actions for the sake of the greater good than women. For example, women would be less likely to support the killing of a young Hitler or torturing a bombing suspect, even if doing so would ultimately save more ...

A complex landscape has both vulnerabilities and resilience to climate change

A complex landscape has both vulnerabilities and resilience to climate change
2015-04-03
HOUGHTON, Mich. (April 3, 2015): Central Appalachian forests have been experiencing the effects of a changing climate for decades, and effects such as more heavy rainfall events, more drought, and more hot days are likely to continue, according to a new vulnerability assessment for the region by the U.S. Forest Service and many partners. The assessment describes effects of climate change that have already been observed, projected changes in the climate and the landscape, and forest vulnerabilities for nine forest ecosystem types in a 29-million-acre area of Ohio, West ...

Science and medicine have a 'publication pollution' problem

2015-04-03
(New York, NY) April 3, 2015 - The scientific community is facing a 'pollution problem' in academic publishing, one that poses a serious threat to the "trustworthiness, utility, and value of science and medicine," according to one of the country's leading medical ethicists. Arthur L. Caplan, PhD, director of the Division of Medical Ethics in the Department of Population Health at NYU Langone Medical Center, shares these and other observations in a commentary publishing April 3 in the journal Mayo Clinic Proceedings. "The pollution of science and medicine by plagiarism, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

UCLA professor Helen Lavretsky reshapes brain health through integrative medicine research

Astronauts found to process some tasks slower in space, but no signs of permanent cognitive decline

Larger pay increases and better benefits could support teacher retention

Researchers characterize mechanism for regulating orderly zygotic genome activation in early embryos

AI analysis of urine can predict flare up of lung disease a week in advance

New DESI results weigh in on gravity

New DESI data shed light on gravity’s pull in the universe

Boosting WA startups: Report calls for investment in talent, diversity and innovation

New AEM study highlights feasibility of cranial accelerometry device for prehospital detection of large-vessel occlusion stroke

High cardiorespiratory fitness linked to lower risk of dementia

Oral microbiome varies with life stress and mental health symptoms in pregnant women

NFL’s Arizona Cardinals provide 12 schools with CPR resources to improve cardiac emergency outcomes

Northerners, Scots and Irish excel at detecting fake accents to guard against outsiders, Cambridge study suggests

Synchronized movement between robots and humans builds trust, study finds

Global experts make sense of the science shaping public policies worldwide in new International Science Council and Frontiers Policy Labs series

The Wistar Institute and Cameroon researchers reveals HIV latency reversing properties in African plant

$4.5 million Dept. of Education grant to expand mental health services through Binghamton University Community Schools

Thermochemical tech shows promising path for building heat

Four Tufts University faculty are named top researchers in the world

Columbia Aging Center epidemiologist co-authors new report from National Academies on using race and ethnicity in biomedical research

Astronomers discover first pairs of white dwarf and main sequence stars in clusters, shining new light on stellar evolution

C-Path’s TRxA announces $1 million award for drug development project in type 1 diabetes

Changing the definition of cerebral palsy

New research could pave way for vaccine against deadly wildlife disease

Listening for early signs of Alzheimer’s disease #ASA187

Research Spotlight: Gastroenterology education improved through inpatient care teaching model

Texas A&M researchers uncover secrets of horse genetics for conservation, breeding

Bioeconomy in Colombia: The race to save Colombia's vital shellfish

NFL’s Colts bring CPR education to flag football to improve cardiac emergency outcomes

Research: Fitness more important than fatness for a lower risk of premature death

[Press-News.org] Frustrated magnets -- new experiment reveals clues to their discontent