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Electrical manipulation of a topological antiferromagnetic state 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 580 (7805) : 608-+
作者:  Chabon, Jacob J.;  Hamilton, Emily G.;  Kurtz, David M.;  Esfahani, Mohammad S.;  Moding, Everett J.;  Stehr, Henning;  Schroers-Martin, Joseph;  Nabet, Barzin Y.;  Chen, Binbin;  Chaudhuri, Aadel A.;  Liu, Chih Long;  Hui, Angela B.;  Jin, Michael C.;  Azad, Tej D.;  Almanza, Diego;  Jeon, Young-Jun;  Nesselbush, Monica C.;  Keh, Lyron Co Ting;  Bonilla, Rene F.;  Yoo, Christopher H.;  Ko, Ryan B.;  Chen, Emily L.;  Merriott, David J.;  Massion, Pierre P.;  Mansfield, Aaron S.;  Jen, Jin;  Ren, Hong Z.;  Lin, Steven H.;  Costantino, Christina L.;  Burr, Risa;  Tibshirani, Robert;  Gambhir, Sanjiv S.;  Berry, Gerald J.;  Jensen, Kristin C.;  West, Robert B.;  Neal, Joel W.;  Wakelee, Heather A.;  Loo, Billy W., Jr.;  Kunder, Christian A.;  Leung, Ann N.;  Lui, Natalie S.;  Berry, Mark F.;  Shrager, Joseph B.;  Nair, Viswam S.;  Haber, Daniel A.;  Sequist, Lecia V.;  Alizadeh, Ash A.;  Diehn, Maximilian
收藏  |  浏览/下载:36/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Room-temperature electrical switching of a topological antiferromagnetic state in polycrystalline Mn3Sn thin films is demonstrated using the same protocol as that used for conventional ferromagnetic metals.


Electrical manipulation of phenomena generated by nontrivial band topology is essential for the development of next-generation technology using topological protection. A Weyl semimetal is a three-dimensional gapless system that hosts Weyl fermions as low-energy quasiparticles(1-4). It has various exotic properties, such as a large anomalous Hall effect (AHE) and chiral anomaly, which are robust owing to the topologically protected Weyl nodes(1-16). To manipulate such phenomena, a magnetic version of Weyl semimetals would be useful for controlling the locations of Weyl nodes in the Brillouin zone. Moreover, electrical manipulation of antiferromagnetic Weyl metals would facilitate the use of antiferromagnetic spintronics to realize high-density devices with ultrafast operation(17,18). However, electrical control of a Weyl metal has not yet been reported. Here we demonstrate the electrical switching of a topological antiferromagnetic state and its detection by the AHE at room temperature in a polycrystalline thin film(19) of the antiferromagnetic Weyl metal Mn3Sn9,10,12,20, which exhibits zero-field AHE. Using bilayer devices composed of Mn3Sn and nonmagnetic metals, we find that an electrical current density of about 10(10) to 10(11) amperes per square metre induces magnetic switching in the nonmagnetic metals, with a large change in Hall voltage. In addition, the current polarity along the bias field and the sign of the spin Hall angle of the nonmagnetic metals-positive for Pt (ref. (21)), close to 0 for Cu and negative for W (ref. (22))-determines the sign of the Hall voltage. Notably, the electrical switching in the antiferromagnet is achieved with the same protocol as that used for ferromagnetic metals(23,24). Our results may lead to further scientific and technological advances in topological magnetism and antiferromagnetic spintronics.


  
Operation of a silicon quantum processor unit cell above one kelvin 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 580 (7803) : 350-+
作者:  Han, Kyuho;  Pierce, Sarah E.;  Li, Amy;  Spees, Kaitlyn;  Anderson, Grace R.;  Seoane, Jose A.;  Lo, Yuan-Hung;  Dubreuil, Michael;  Olivas, Micah;  Kamber, Roarke A.;  Wainberg, Michael;  Kostyrko, Kaja;  Kelly, Marcus R.;  Yousefi, Maryam;  Simpkins, Scott W.;  Yao, David
收藏  |  浏览/下载:8/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Quantum computers are expected to outperform conventional computers in several important applications, from molecular simulation to search algorithms, once they can be scaled up to large numbers-typically millions-of quantum bits (qubits)(1-3). For most solid-state qubit technologies-for example, those using superconducting circuits or semiconductor spins-scaling poses a considerable challenge because every additional qubit increases the heat generated, whereas the cooling power of dilution refrigerators is severely limited at their operating temperature (less than 100 millikelvin)(4-6). Here we demonstrate the operation of a scalable silicon quantum processor unit cell comprising two qubits confined to quantum dots at about 1.5 kelvin. We achieve this by isolating the quantum dots from the electron reservoir, and then initializing and reading the qubits solely via tunnelling of electrons between the two quantum dots(7-9). We coherently control the qubits using electrically driven spin resonance(10,11) in isotopically enriched silicon(12 28)Si, attaining single-qubit gate fidelities of 98.6 per cent and a coherence time of 2 microseconds during '  hot'  operation, comparable to those of spin qubits in natural silicon at millikelvin temperatures(13-16). Furthermore, we show that the unit cell can be operated at magnetic fields as low as 0.1 tesla, corresponding to a qubit control frequency of 3.5 gigahertz, where the qubit energy is well below the thermal energy. The unit cell constitutes the core building block of a full-scale silicon quantum computer and satisfies layout constraints required by error-correction architectures(8),(17). Our work indicates that a spin-based quantum computer could be operated at increased temperatures in a simple pumped He-4 system (which provides cooling power orders of magnitude higher than that of dilution refrigerators), thus potentially enabling the integration of classical control electronics with the qubit array(18,19).


  
Antagonistic effects of growing season and autumn temperatures on the timing of leaf coloration in winter deciduous trees 期刊论文
GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2018, 24 (8) : 3537-3545
作者:  Liu, Guohua;  Chen, Xiaoqiu;  Zhang, Qinghua;  Lang, Weiguang;  Delpierre, Nicolas
收藏  |  浏览/下载:5/0  |  提交时间:2019/04/09
air temperature  autumn plant phenology  climate change impacts  drought-stress control  environmental cues  leaf life-span control  low temperature control  precipitation