(Press-News.org)
Chestnut Hill, Mass (8/24/2023) – Electronic nematic order in kagome materials has thus far been entangled with charge density waves. Now it is finally observed as a stand-alone phase in a titanium-based Kagome metal, a team of researchers led by Boston College physicists reported recently in Nature Physics.
Quantum materials composed of atoms arranged on a kagome net of corner-sharing triangles present an exciting platform to realize novel electronic behavior, paper co-author and Boston College Professor of Physics Ilija Zeljkovic explained.
There is a wide array of transition metal atoms that can be used to populate the kagome layers in materials that have been synthesized to date. Materials based on vanadium kagome layers with AV3Sb5 chemical formula – a material composed essentially of vanadium and antimony – emerged as rare examples of kagome superconductors.
The system interests researchers since it showcases intriguing similarities to high-temperature superconductors, such as space-modulating charge density waves and electronic directionality. Electronic unidirectionality can be viewed as electrons being able to travel faster or slower along different crystalline directions. In these systems, electronic unidirectionality was always accompanied and seemingly generated by charge density waves, or periodic spatially-modulated charge density, which also appears unidirectional.
The team studied bulk single crystals of a recently discovered family of titanium-based kagome metals that essentially consist of titanium and bismuth, known specifically as ATi3Bi5 — where A represents either cesium and rubidium. This system has the same crystal structure as AV3Sb5, but with a kagome net of titanium atoms replacing the vanadium (V), and bismuth (Bi) substituting for antimony (Sb).
To reveal the energy and momenta of electrons in the material, the team used scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy to image the electronic band structure, said Zeljkovic.
“We wanted to see if electronic unidirectionality can exist without the accompanying charge density waves,” said Zeljkovic. “This phase is termed electronic nematic order, which entails breaking the rotational symmetry of the system without also breaking the translational symmetry, which is what charge density waves cause.”
For example, a perfect hexagon is rotationally symmetric, but a slightly elongated, or stretched, hexagon would be considered ‘nematic’. ATi3Bi5 presented an ideal platform to explore this due to being isostructural to heavily studied AV3Sb5, but showed no charge density waves.
The STM measurements confirmed the absence of charge density waves in the material, reported the team, which included Boston College Professor of Physics Ziqiang Wang and students Hong Li, Siyu Cheng, and Keyu Zeng; as well as colleagues from UC Santa Barbara, Israel’s Weizmann Institute of Science, and Germany’s Ludwig-Maximilians University.
“Importantly we detected a substantial electronic unidirectionality, with a single preferred direction, in how electrons interact with one another,” said Zeljkovic. “More precisely, electrons, which can be thought of as waves, scatter and interfere with one another, forming standing waves. We discovered that the standing waves appear more intense in one particular direction.”
Other researchers have found superconductivity in the same single crystals, however Zeljkovic said the resistivity and magnetization analysis did not detect superconductivity in their samples.
Zeljkovic said next steps in his team’s research will involve understanding what drives the variation in superconducting properties across different samples grown by different collaborations, and how electronic unidirectionality detected here affects superconductivity.
END
New York, NY (August 24, 2023) — Asian Americans have significantly higher exposure than other ethnic or racial groups to PFAS, a family of thousands of synthetic chemicals also known as “toxic forever” chemicals, Mount Sinai-led researchers report.
People frequently encounter PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) in everyday life, and these exposures carry potentially adverse health impacts, according to the study published in Environmental Science and Technology, in the special issue “Data Science for Advancing Environmental Science, Engineering, and Technology.”
The ...
PUYALLUP, Wash. – A relatively simple, inexpensive method of filtering urban stormwater runoff dramatically boosted survival of newly hatched coho salmon in an experimental study. That’s the good news for the threatened species from the Washington State University-led research. The bad news: unfiltered stormwater killed almost all of them.
The findings, published in the journal Science of the Total Environment, are consistent with previous research on adult and juvenile coho that found exposure to untreated roadway runoff that typically winds up ...
A new study led by Dr. Xuekun Lu from Queen Mary University of London in collaboration with an international team of researchers from the UK and USA has found a way to prevent lithium plating in electric vehicle batteries, which could lead to faster charging times. The paper was published in the journal Nature Communications.
Lithium plating is a phenomenon that can occur in lithium-ion batteries during fast charging. It occurs when lithium ions build up on the surface of the battery's negative ...
Amsterdam, Netherlands – 24 Aug 2023: Feeling safe from crime is associated with a 9% lower risk of premature death and 6% lower likelihood of a heart attack, according to a study in more than 35,000 adults presented at ESC Congress 2023.1
“There is increasing evidence that the neighbourhood we live in affects our health,” said study author Dr. Mengya Li of the National Center for Cardiovascular Diseases, Beijing, China. “This study highlights the importance of many aspects of our surroundings for heart health and longevity, including feeling safe, having shops, transport and parks close by, cleanliness, and feeling ...
Amsterdam, Netherlands – 24 Aug 2023: Using a defibrillator for a cardiac arrest victim improves 30-day survival even with ambulance response times as short as two minutes, according to research presented at ESC Congress 2023.1
The majority of sudden cardiac arrests occur in the community. A cardiac arrhythmia, called ventricular fibrillation, causes the heart to cease pumping and blood flow stops. If blood flow is not restored quickly, the individual passes out and dies within 10 to 20 minutes. Members of the public can help by calling an ambulance and performing chest compressions (called cardiopulmonary resuscitation; CPR) while asking someone else to find a defibrillator. ...
Women with ME/CFS tend to have more symptoms and co-occurring conditions than men, according to initial results from the world’s largest study of the disease.
It has long been known that women are more likely to have ME/CFS (myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome) but the DecodeME study has shown for the first time how their experience differs from men.
The study reveals that women who have ME/CFS – a long-term neurological condition where an excessive increase in symptoms can be triggered by normal levels of exertion – for more than 10 years ...
Osaka, Japan – Even if you are a lone wolf, considering some group activities may not be a bad idea, especially when it comes to healthcare. Osaka Metropolitan University scientists have found that community-based adult day services help lower the risk of frailty in older adults.
Frailty is a state of physical and mental decline that results from aging; it represents an intermediate status between being healthy and being severely disabled. In a rapidly aging society, preventing frailty and maintaining independence in older adults are crucial challenges.
“In Japan, older individuals certified as being on a support ...
The early physical and mental development of a child sets the stage for lifelong progress and fulfillment. Spending quality time with their parents can bring out significant positive changes among children during their formative years.
Across Japan, the extent of fathers' participation in childcare-related activities has historically been limited because of the entrenched gender-based division of labor. Fathers, especially those in their 20s–40s, are expected to show full commitment towards work and have been prioritizing their professional commitments over family. Consequently, a significant number ...
It’s notoriously difficult for doctors to identify a wound that is becoming infected. Clinical signs and symptoms are imprecise and methods of identifying bacteria can be time-consuming and inaccessible, so a diagnosis can be subjective and dependent on clinician experience. But infection can stall healing or spread into the body if it isn’t treated quickly, putting a patient’s health in grave danger. An international team of scientists and clinicians thinks they have the solution: a device run from a smartphone or tablet app which allows advanced ...
Urbana, Illinois — The Speech Accessibility Project is almost halfway through its first phase of gathering voice recordings from people with Parkinson’s.
The project still needs more participants, especially those with related neurological conditions like MSA, PSP, CBD, and those who are post-DBS. They must be U.S. residents older than age 18. They can sign up via the Speech Accessibility App.
Led by UIUC with support from Amazon, Apple, Google, Meta, and Microsoft, the Speech Accessibility Project aims to make voice recognition technology ...