Physics & Astronomy

Twisting Atomically Thin Materials Could Boost Quantum Computing

Graduate student Trevor Ollis fills a camera with liquid nitrogen to cool it to -120 degrees Celsius in order to examine monolayer materials developed in the laboratory of Nickolas Vamivakas. Image Credit: University of Rochester photo / J. Adam Fenster

Graduate student Trevor Ollis fills a camera with liquid nitrogen to cool it to -120 degrees Celsius in order to examine monolayer materials developed in the laboratory of Nickolas Vamivakas. Image Credit: University of Rochester photo / J. Adam Fenster

Placing two layers of special 2D materials together and turning them at large angles creates artificial atoms with intriguing optical properties

By taking two flakes of special materials that are just one atom thick and twisting them at high angles, researchers at the University of Rochester have unlocked unique optical properties that could be used in quantum computers and other quantum technologies. In a new study published in Nano Letters, the researchers show that precisely layering nano-thin materials creates excitons—essentially, artificial atoms—that can act as quantum information bits, or qubits.

Vamivakas and his fellow researchers place monolayer materials in chips that are cooled through a cryostat to observe their unique optical properties. Image Credit: University of Rochester photo / J. Adam Fenster

“If we had just a single layer of this material we’re using, these dark excitons wouldn’t interact with light,” says Nickolas Vamivakas, the Marie C. Wilson and Joseph C. Wilson Professor of Optical Physics. “By doing the big twist, it turns on artificial atoms within the material that we can control optically, but they are still protected from the environment.”

The work builds on the 2010 Nobel Prize–winning discovery that peeling carbon apart until it reaches a single layer of atoms creates a new two-dimensional (2D) material called graphene with special quantum characteristics.

Scientists have since explored how optical and electrical properties of graphene and other 2D materials change when layered on top of one another and twisted at very small angles—called moiré superlattices. For example, when graphene is twisted at the “magic” angle of 1.1 degrees, it creates special patterns that produce properties such as superconductivity.

But scientists from Rochester’s Institute of Optics and Department of Physics and Astronomy took a different approach. They used molybdenum diselenide, a 2D material that is more fickle than graphene, and twisted it at much higher angles of up to 40 degrees. Still, the researchers found the twisted monolayers produced excitons that were able to retain information when activated by light.

Two nano-thin layers of molybdenum diselenide twisted at a high angle produce bright excitons (red spike) and dark excitons (blue spike) that can be manipulated by photons (green arrows). Image Credit: Arnab Barman Ray / Nano Letters

“This was very surprising for us,” says Arnab Barman Ray, an optics PhD candidate. “Molybdenum diselenide is notorious because other materials in the family of moiré materials show better information-retaining capacity. We think that if we use some of those other materials at these large angles, they will probably work even better.”

The team views this as an important early step toward new types of quantum devices.

“Down the line, we hope these artificial atoms can be used like memory or nodes in a quantum network, or put into optical cavities to create quantum materials,” says Vamivakas. “These could be the backbone for devices like the next generation of lasers or even tools to simulate quantum physics.”

The research was supported through the Air Force Office of Scientific Research and conducted at the URnano facilities.

Original Source: https://www.rochester.edu/newscenter/twisting-atomically-thin-materials-quantum-technology-643432/

Original Publication
Arnab Barman RayTrevor OllisK.R. SethurajAnthony Nickolas Vamivakas
Journal: Nano Letters
Article Title: Diffusion of Valley-Coherent Dark Excitons in a Large-Angle Incommensurate Moiré Homobilayer
Article Publication Date: 14-Mar-2025
DOI: https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.nanolett.5c00456

Media Contact
Luke Auburn
University of Rochester
luke.auburn@rochester.edu
Cell: 5854903198

Source: EurekAlert!

Comments (0)

Write a comment