Confinement Heteroepitaxy: A Novel Route for Realizaing Exotic 2D Materials
ORAL
Abstract
Advancement of nascent electronic quantum frontiers (spintronics, photonics, and sensing) has been mediated through development of materials platforms with non-trivial band topologies, allowing distinct access to quantum information otherwise lost through decoherence. However, access to the more exotic quantum phenomena within these frontiers still pose a materials challenge due to synthesis difficulties or small windows of performance, which render these routes limited in scalability. We have demonstrated facile synthesis of air-stable, atomically thin, single crystal two-dimensional (2D) metals (gallium, indium, tin, lead, and silver) within a silicon carbide and epitaxial graphene interface through high-pressure intercalation (i.e. confinement heteroepitaxy, or CHet). The non-centrosymmetric nature, coupled with potentially strong spin orbit coupling and superconductivity, in these 2D metals, suggest this novel synthesis route as an avenue for manifesting exotic effects (such as topological superconductivity) due to non-trivial band topology.
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Presenters
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Alexander Vera
Pennsylvania State University
Authors
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Alexander Vera
Pennsylvania State University
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Wilson Yanez
Department of Physics, The Pennsylvania State University, Pennsylvania State University, Physics, Pennsylvania State University
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Natalie Briggs
Pennsylvania State University
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Timothy Bowen
Pennsylvania State University
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Siavash Rajabpour
Department of Chemical Engineering, Penn State University, Pennsylvania State University
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Nitin Samarth
Penn State University, Pennsylvania State University, Department of Physics, The Pennsylvania State University, Physics, Pennsylvania State University
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JOSHUA ROBINSON
Pennsylvania State University