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QSQM Junior Research Hour: "Atomic SET: a new technique for high-resolution potential imaging," Dr. Dahlia Klein

Event Type
Seminar/Symposium
Sponsor
Quantum Sensing and Quantum Materials (QSQM)
Location
UIUC: 280 Materials Research Laboratory | SLAC: 130 McCullough Building
Date
Jul 12, 2023   1:00 - 2:00 pm  
Speaker
Dr. Dahlia Klein, Zuckerman Scholar & Koshland Prize Fellow, Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel
Contact
Dipanjan Chaudhuri
E-Mail
dc36@illinois.edu
Views
40
Originating Calendar
QSQM Events

Atomic SET: a new technique for high-resolution potential imaging

Abstract: Imaging the local electrostatic potential of quantum materials plays a crucial role in understanding charge order, broken symmetries, and phase transitions. Until now, the most sensitive tool for such imaging is the scanning single electron transistor (SET), which has unearthed a wealth of information in van der Waals systems. However, it is spatially limited by the lithographically defined dimensions of a quantum dot on a tip or cantilever hovering above the sample of interest, resulting in a resolution on the order of 100 nanometers. In this talk, we introduce a new experimental approach, which we call Atomic SET, to image the electrostatic potential in 2D systems. It achieves two orders of magnitude improvement in spatial resolution and operates from room temperature down to cryogenic temperatures. This scanning charge detector is built from the same platform as the quantum twisting microscope (QTM): we assemble in situ van der Waals heterostructures by bringing 2D tip and sample surfaces into contact while simultaneously scanning the sample. This geometry overcomes the limits of previous scanning SETs, enabling resolution of about 1 nanometer. Our technique promises to open up wide-ranging opportunities for direct nanoscale visualization of electronic phenomena with unprecedented spatial resolution in a number of 2D systems, including imaging topological edge states and within moirĂ© length scales.

Brief Bio: Dr. Klein is an experimental condensed matter physicist specializing in 2D quantum systems. She obtained her PhD from MIT, working on magnetism and superconductivity in two-dimensional van der Waals materials. Presently, she is the Zuckerman Scholar & Koshland Prize Fellow at Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel. 


About the QSQM: The EFRC-QSQM center aims to develop and apply nontrivial quantum sensing to measure and correlate local and nonlocal quantum observables in exotic superconductors, topological crystalline insulators, and strange metals. The center is led by the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in partnership with the University of Illinois at Chicago and the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory.

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