Physics World 08月25日
科学家首次直接成像原子振动新类型
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美国研究人员首次直接成像了被称为“莫尔超晶格声子”的一类极低能量原子振动,并证实其在特定二维材料中是原子振动的主要方式。这种振动可能在材料的热电荷传输和量子相行为中扮演关键角色。研究利用电子断层扫描技术,以皮米尺度解析了原子振动,揭示了原子在不同堆叠区域振幅的差异,验证了莫尔超晶格声子的理论预测。这项突破为理解和控制二维材料中的晶格动力学开辟了新途径,有望用于设计具有可编程热电特性的材料。

⚛️ 突破性发现:研究首次直接成像了莫尔超晶格声子,证实了这种此前仅为理论预测的原子振动类型真实存在于特定二维材料中,并证明了其是原子振动的主要方式。

🔬 精密成像技术:研究团队利用电子断层扫描技术,实现了高达15皮米的超高空间分辨率,能够精确捕捉原子层面的微小振动变化,从而成功探测到莫尔超晶格声子。

📊 振动模式揭示:成像结果显示,原子振动幅度在不同堆叠区域(如AA堆叠区)存在显著差异,并且在孤子边界处表现出高度各向异性,这与莫尔超晶格声子的理论模型预测高度一致。

💡 应用前景广阔:理解和控制莫尔超晶格声子有望为设计具有可编程热电性能的新型材料提供基础,这对于未来的低功耗电子设备、量子计算和纳米传感器至关重要。

Researchers in the US have directly imaged a class of extremely low-energy atomic vibrations called moiré phasons for the first time. In doing so, they proved that these vibrations are not just a theoretical concept, but are in fact the main way that atoms vibrate in certain twisted two-dimensional materials. Such vibrations may play a critical role in heat and charge transport and how quantum phases behave in these materials.

“Phasons had only been predicted by theory until now, and no one had ever directly observed them, or even thought that this was possible,” explains Yichao Zhang of the University of Maryland, who co-led the effort with Pinshane Huang of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. “Our work opens up an entirely new way of understanding lattice vibrations in 2D quantum materials.”

A second class of moiré phonons

When two sheets of a 2D materials are placed on top of each other and slightly twisted, their atoms form a moiré pattern, or superlattice. This superlattice contains quasi-periodic regions of rotationally aligned regions (denoted AA or AB) separated by a network of stacking faults called solitons.

Materials of this type are also known to possess distinctive vibrational modes known as moiré phonons, which arise from vibrations of the material’s crystal lattice. These modes vary with the twist angle between layers and can change the physical properties of the materials.

In addition to moiré phonons, two-dimensional moiré materials are also predicted to host a second class of vibrational mode known as phasons. However, these phasons had never been directly observed experimentally until now.

Imaging phasons at the picometre scale

In the new work, which is published in Science, the researchers used a powerful microscopy technique called electron ptychography that enabled them to image samples with spatial resolutions as fine as 15 picometres (1 pm = 10-12 m). At this level of precision, explains Zhang, subtle changes in thermally driven atomic vibrations can be detected by analysing the shape and size of individual atoms. “This meant we could map how atoms vibrate across different stacking regions of the moiré superlattice,” she says. “What we found was striking: the vibrations weren’t uniform – atoms showed larger amplitudes in AA-stacked regions and highly anisotropic behaviour at soliton boundaries. These patterns align precisely with theoretical predictions for moiré phasons.”

Zhang has been studying phonons using electron microscopy for years, but limitations on imaging resolutions had largely restricted her previous studies to nanometre (10-9 m) scales. She recently realized that electron ptychography would resolve atomic vibrations with much higher precision, and therefore detect moiré phasons varying across picometre scales.

She and her colleagues chose to study twisted 2D materials because they can support many exotic electronic phenomena, including superconductivity and correlated insulated states. However, the role of lattice dynamics, including the behaviour of phasons in these structures, remains poorly understood. “The problem,” she explains, “is that phasons are both extremely low in energy and spatially non-uniform, making them undetectable by most experimental techniques. To overcome this, we had to push electron ptychography to its limits and validate our observations through careful modelling and simulations.”

This work opens new possibilities for understanding (and eventually controlling) how vibrations behave in complex 2D systems, she tells Physics World. “Phasons can affect how heat flows, how electrons move, and even how new phases of matter emerge. If we can harness these vibrations, we could design materials with programmable thermal and electronic properties, which would be important for future low-power electronics, quantum computing and nanoscale sensors.”

More broadly, electron ptychography provides a powerful new tool for exploring lattice dynamics in a wide range of advanced materials. The team is now using electron ptychography to study how defects, strain and interfaces affect phason behaviour. These imperfections are common in many real-world materials and devices and can cause their performance to deteriorate significantly. “Ultimately, we hope to capture how phasons respond to external stimuli, like how they evolve with change in temperature or applied fields,” Zhang reveals. “That could give us an even deeper understanding of how they interact with electrons, excitons or other collective excitations in quantum materials.”

The post Highest-resolution images ever taken of a single atom reveal new kind of vibrations appeared first on Physics World.

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莫尔超晶格声子 原子振动 二维材料 电子断层扫描 Moiré Phasons Atomic Vibrations 2D Materials Electron Ptychography
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