http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/06/090615144431.htm

New Exotic Material Could Revolutionize Electronics

ScienceDaily (June 16, 2009) — Move over, silicon—it may be time to give
the Valley a new name. Physicists at the Department of Energy's (DOE)
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory and Stanford University have
confirmed the existence of a type of material that could one day provide
dramatically faster, more efficient computer chips.

Recently-predicted and much-sought, the material allows electrons on its
surface to travel with no loss of energy at room temperatures and can be
fabricated using existing semiconductor technologies. Such material
could provide a leap in microchip speeds, and even become the bedrock of
an entirely new kind of computing industry based on spintronics, the
next evolution of electronics.

Physicists Yulin Chen, Zhi-Xun Shen and their colleagues tested the
behavior of electrons in the compound bismuth telluride. The results,
published online June 11 in Science Express, show a clear signature of
what is called a topological insulator, a material that enables the free
flow of electrons across its surface with no loss of energy.

The discovery was the result of teamwork between theoretical and
experimental physicists at the Stanford Institute for Materials & Energy
Science, a joint SLAC-Stanford institute. In recent months, SIMES
theorist Shoucheng Zhang and colleagues predicted that several bismuth
and antimony compounds would act as topological insulators at
room-temperature. The new paper confirms that prediction in bismuth
telluride. "The working style of SIMES is perfect," Chen said.
"Theorists, experimentalists, and sample growers can collaborate in a
broad sense."

The experimenters examined bismuth telluride samples using X-rays from
the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource at SLAC and the Advanced
Light Source at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. When Chen and his
colleagues investigated the electrons' behavior, they saw the clear
signature of a topological insulator. Not only that, the group
discovered that the reality of bismuth telluride was even better than
theory.

"The theorists were very close," Chen said, "but there was a
quantitative difference." The experiments showed that bismuth telluride
could tolerate even higher temperatures than theorists had predicted.
"This means that the material is closer to application than we thought,"
Chen said.

This magic is possible thanks to surprisingly well-behaved electrons.
The quantum spin of each electron is aligned with the electron's
motion—a phenomenon called the quantum spin Hall effect. This alignment
is a key component in creating spintronics devices, new kinds of devices
that go beyond standard electronics. "When you hit something, there's
usually scattering, some possibility of bouncing back," explained
theorist Xiaoliang Qi. "But the quantum spin Hall effect means that you
can't reflect to exactly the reverse path." As a dramatic consequence,
electrons flow without resistance. Put a voltage on a topological
insulator, and this special spin current will flow without heating the
material or dissipating.

Topological insulators aren't conventional superconductors nor fodder
for super-efficient power lines, as they can only carry small currents,
but they could pave the way for a paradigm shift in microchip
development. "This could lead to new applications of spintronics, or
using the electron spin to carry information," Qi said. "Whether or not
it can build better wires, I'm optimistic it can lead to new devices,
transistors, and spintronics devices."

Fortunately for real-world applications, bismuth telluride is fairly
simple to grow and work with. Chen said, "It's a three-dimensional
material, so it's easy to fabricate with the current mature
semiconductor technology. It's also easy to dope—you can tune the
properties relatively easily."

"This is already a very exciting thing," he said, adding that the
material "could let us make a device with new operating principles."

The high quality bismuth telluride samples were grown at SIMES by James
Analytis, Ian Fisher and colleagues.

SIMES, the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource at SLAC, and the
Advanced Light Source at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory are
supported by the Office of Basic Energy Sciences within the DOE Office
of Science.

Journal reference:

   1. Chen et al. Experimental Realization of a Three-Dimensional
Topological Insulator, Bi2Te3. Science, 2009; DOI: 10.1126/science.1173034

Adapted from materials provided by DOE/SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory.

-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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