Publication
APS March Meeting 2021
Talk

Probing resonating valence bond states in artificial quantum magnets using scanning tunneling microscopy

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Abstract

Designing and characterizing the many-body behaviors of quantum materials represents a prominent challenge for understanding strongly correlated physics and quantum information processing. We constructed artificial quantum magnets on a surface by using spin-1/2 atoms in a scanning tunneling microscope (STM). These coupled spins feature strong quantum fluctuations due to antiferromagnetic exchange interactions between neighboring atoms. To characterize the resulting collective magnetic states and their energy levels, we performed electron spin resonance (ESR) [1] on individual atoms within each quantum magnet. This gives atomic-scale access to properties of the exotic quantum many-body states, such as a finite-size realization of a resonating valence bond state. The tunable atomic-scale magnetic field from the STM tip allows us to further characterize and engineer the quantum states [2]. These results, combined with pulsed ESR [3], open a new avenue to designing and exploring quantum magnets at the atomic scale for applications in spintronics and quantum simulations. [1] Baumann et al., Science 350, 417 (2015). [2] Yang et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 122, 227203 (2019). [3] Yang et al., Science 366, 509 (2019).