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    Home»Physics»Quantum Breakthrough: 1.58 Dimensions Unlock Zero-Loss Energy Efficiency
    Physics

    Quantum Breakthrough: 1.58 Dimensions Unlock Zero-Loss Energy Efficiency

    By Utrecht UniversityJuly 25, 20244 Comments5 Mins Read
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    Bismuth Fractal Formed on Top of Indium Antimonide
    These photos were taken with a scanning tunneling microscope. Left: bismuth fractal (yellow) formed on top of indium antimonide (brown). The individual atoms are visible here. Right: the local density of electrons in a fractal. Credit: Utrecht University

    Fractals might solve energy waste in information processing.

    Topological insulators, capable of transmitting electricity without loss, may function in fractional dimensions such as 1.58. This breakthrough, combined with room-temperature operability, paves the way for advancements in quantum computing and energy efficiency through fractal structures.

    What if we could find a way to make electric currents flow, without energy loss? A promising approach for this involves using materials known as topological insulators. They are known to exist in one (wire), two (sheet) and three (cube) dimensions; all with different possible applications in electronic devices. Theoretical physicists at Utrecht University, together with experimentalists at Shanghai Jiao Tong University, have discovered that topological insulators may also exist at 1.58 dimensions, and that these could be used for energy-efficient information processing. Their study was published recently in Nature Physics.

    Classical bits, the units of computer operation, are based on electric currents: electrons running means 1, no electrons running means 0. With a combination of 0s and 1s, one can build all the devices that you use in your daily life, from cellphones to computers. However, while running, these electrons meet defects and impurities in the material, and lose energy. This is what happens when your device gets warm: the energy is converted into heat, and so your battery is drained faster.

    A Novel State of Matter

    Topological insulators are special materials that allow for the flow of a current without energy loss. They were only discovered in 1980, and their discovery was awarded a Nobel Prize. It revealed a new state of matter: on the inside, topological insulators are insulating, while at their boundaries, there are currents running. This makes them very suitable for application in quantum technologies and could reduce world energy consumption enormously. There was just one problem: these properties were discovered only in the presence of very strong magnetic fields and very low temperatures, around minus 270 degrees Celsius, which made them unsuitable for use in daily life.

    Over the past decades, significant progress has been made to overcome these limitations. In 2017, researchers discovered that a two-dimensional, single-atom-thick layer of bismuth displayed all the right properties at room temperature, without the presence of a magnetic field. This advancement brought the use of topological insulators in electronic devices closer to reality.

    Romanesco Roman Cauliflower
    Fractal structures can also be found in nature, such as in Romanesco broccoli.

    Exploring Fractal Dimensions in Quantum Technology

    The research field received an extra boost in 2022 with a Gravitation grant of more than 20 million euros for the QuMAT consortium. In this consortium, theoretical physicists of Utrecht University, together with experimentalists at Shanghai Jiao Tong University, have now shown that many states without energy loss might exist somewhere in between one and two dimensions. At 1.58 dimensions, for example.

    It may be difficult to imagine 1.58 dimensions, but the idea is more familiar than you think. Such dimensions can be found in fractal structures, such as your lungs, the network of neurons in your brain, or Romanesco broccoli. They are structures that scale in a different way than normal objects, called “self-similar structures”: if you zoom in, you will see the same structure again and again.

    Innovating at the Edge: Fractal Topological States

    By growing a chemical element (bismuth) on top of a semiconductor (indium antimonide), the scientists in China obtained fractal structures that were spontaneously formed, upon varying the growth conditions. The scientists in Utrecht then theoretically showed that, from these structures, zero-dimensional corner modes and lossless one-dimensional edge states emerged.

    “By looking in between dimensions, we found the best of two worlds,” says Cristiane Morais Smith, who has been leading the theoretical research at Utrecht University. “The fractals behave like two dimensional topological insulators at finite energies and at the same time exhibit, at zero energy, a state at its corners that could be used as a qubit, the building blocks of quantum computers. Hence, the discovery opens new paths to the long-wished qubits.”

    The Power of Intuition in Scientific Discovery

    Interestingly, the discovery was the result of a gut feeling. “When I was visiting Shanghai Jiao Tong University and saw the structures produced by the group, I got very excited,” Morais Smith says. “My intuition was telling me that the structures should exhibit all the right properties.”

    She then got back to Utrecht and discussed the problem with her students, who were very interested to do the calculations. Together with master student Robert Canyellas, her former PhD candidate Rodrigo Arouca (now at Uppsala University), and current PhD candidate Lumen Eek, the theoretical team managed to explain the experiments and confirm the novel properties.

    Uncharted Dimensions

    In follow-up research, the experimental group in China will try to grow a superconductor on top of the fractal structure. These fractals have many holes, and there are lossless currents running around many of them. Those could be used for energy-efficient processing of information.

    The structures also exhibit zero-energy modes at their corners, thus combining the best of the one-dimensional and two-dimensional worlds, according to Morais Smith. “If this works, it might reveal even more unexpected secrets hidden at dimension 1.58,” she says. “The topological features of fractals really show the richness of going into uncharted dimensions.”

    Reference: “Topological edge and corner states in bismuth fractal nanostructures” by R. Canyellas, Chen Liu, R. Arouca, L. Eek, Guanyong Wang, Yin Yin, Dandan Guan, Yaoyi Li, Shiyong Wang, Hao Zheng, Canhua Liu, Jinfeng Jia and C. Morais Smith, 1 July 2024, Nature Physics.
    DOI: 10.1038/s41567-024-02551-8

    Materials Science Popular Quantum Computing Quantum Information Science Qubits Utrecht University
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    4 Comments

    1. Bao-hua ZHANG on July 25, 2024 4:39 pm

      It may be difficult to imagine 1.58 dimensions, but the idea is more familiar than you think. Uncharted Dimensions, The Power of Intuition in Scientific Discovery, and so on.
      Please ask researchers to think deeply:
      1. Is your intuitive quantum state high-dimensional matter or low dimensional matter?
      2. Is topological vortex high-dimensional matter or low dimensional matter?
      3. Can low dimensional matter be the understructure of high-dimensional matter?
      4. Can you understand your 1.58 dimensions via topological architecture?
      and so on.

      Scientific research guided by correct theories can help humanity avoid detours, failures, and pomposity. Please witness the exemplary collaboration between theoretical physicists and experimentalists (https://scitechdaily.com/microscope-spacecrafts-most-precise-test-of-key-component-of-the-theory-of-general-relativity/#comment-854286). Contemporary physics has always lived in a self righteous children’s story world. Whose values have been overturned by such a comical and ridiculous reality?

      Misguided by the pseudo-scientific theory of Physical Review Letters (PRL), many researchers do not consider the similarities and differences between geometric shapes and physical reality in physics research, but indulge in imagination. Although scientific research can be imagined, it cannot be done recklessly.

      Reply
      • Bao-hua ZHANG on July 26, 2024 1:11 am

        In the superposition, deflection, and entanglement of topological vortices, the change of symmetry is always the Symmetry-Readjusted, not the Symmetry-Broken.
        The physical phenomena observed in scientific research are not precisely symmetrical. That’s because it’s difficult for us to observe the entirety of the world which is interactions and interconnections.
        Being in the world of spin wave interactions of topological vorties, any asymmetry is a local manifestation of overall symmetry adjustment. Perhaps one day, humans will truly understand the immense power of symmetry.

        Reply
    2. M-P Koontz on July 26, 2024 1:46 pm

      It looks like the triforce.

      Reply
    3. Basil on August 7, 2024 1:07 pm

      i think we found bill cipher

      Reply
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