Realizing the Smallest Surface Adsorbed Quantum Magnets
DIPC Seminars
- Speaker
 - 
                Harald Brune (Institute of Physics, EPFL, Switzerland)
                
 - When
 - 
                  2016/09/08
                  
                    
14:00 - Place
 - Donostia International Physics Center
 - Add to calendar
 - 
              
                
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          Realizing the Smallest Surface Adsorbed Quantum Magnets  
  
The magnetic states of nanostructures are of high interest for information
storage and  
quantum information processing. This has triggered the search for the smallest
possible  
magnets. In devices, electrodes have to be attached to them for readout and
manipulation of  
the magnetic quantum states. This corresponds to their adsorption onto
conducting surfaces.  
  
Possible candidates for the smallest surface adsorbed magnets are molecules
and small  
metal clusters down to the ultimate size limit of single metal adatoms. The
benchmarks for  
quantum magnets are their magnetic relaxation and coherence times, T1 and T2.
The first  
determines how long information can be stored in a magnetic quantum state, and
the second  
defines the time one has to take out a quantum computation step.  
  
Many molecular magnets that exhibit promising properties in bulk samples loose
them  
entirely when they are surface adsorbed, and all single metal adatoms reported
so far are  
perfect paramagnets, despite their high magnetic anisotropies [1]. This is
predominantly due  
to scattering with metal conduction electrons. In the case of molecules,
conformational  
changes induced by surface adsorption may add to it. Finally, for higher
temperature, phonon-induced magnetization reversal starts to override electron
scattering.  
  
We show that these problems can largely be overcome by using oxide, graphene,
and  
hexagonal boron-nitride spacer layers that significantly enhance the magnetic
lifetimes of the  
surface adsorbed species as compared to direct adsorption onto a metal
substrate. Pc2Tb  
double-decker molecules adsorbed on MgO(100) thin films grown on Ag(100) have
much  
longer spin-relaxation time and wider hysteresis than in bulk samples [2]. Ho
atoms on the  
same surface are the first single atom magnets [3]. They exhibit spin-
relaxation times of an  
hour at 2 K and display hysteresis up to 30 K, thus outperforming best
molecular magnets.  
  
[1] I. G. Rau et al., Science 344, 988 (2014).  
[2] C. Wäckerlin et al., Adv. Mater. 28 5195 (2016).  
[3] F. Donati et al., Science 352 318 (2016).