nanoscale views

Thursday, July 09, 2009

We need more papers like this.

Somehow I had missed this paper when it came out on the arxiv last November, but I came across it the other day while looking for something else in the literature. It's all about the challenges and hazards of trying to measure magnetization of either tiny samples or those with extremely small magnetic responses. Some of the cautions are rather obvious (e.g., don't handle samples with steel tools, since even tiny amounts of steel contamination will give detectable magnetic signals), and others are much more subtle (e.g., magnetic signatures from Kapton tape (due to dust! I learned about this one first hand a few years ago.) and deformed plastic straws (commonly used as sample holders in a popular brand of magnetometer)). Papers like this are incredibly valuable, and usually hard to publish. Still, I much prefer this style, writing a substantive, cautionary paper that is informative and helpful, to the obvious alternative of writing aggressive comments in response to papers that look suspect to you. The paper is so good that I'm even willing to forgive them their choice of font.

Wednesday, July 08, 2009

Figures and permissions - Why, AAAS?

Perhaps someone out there can enlighten me. For review articles, if you want to reproduce a figure from someone's published work, you are required to get permission from the copyright holder (e.g., APS for Physical Review, ACS for Nano Letters, etc.). As far as I can tell, the professional societies (APS, ACS) are cool about this, and won't charge you for permission. Even Nature, a for-profit magazine, does not charge for this if all you're doing is using a figure here and there. However, Science, run by the non-profit AAAS, wants to charge $31.25 per figure for permission to reproduce that figure in a review article. Why is Science doing this? Is this some attempt to recoup publication costs? Anyone got an explanation?

arxiv failure

It would appear that the arxiv is having some issues. Bizarrely, this seems to affect cond-mat, but not (for example) astr-ph. In cond-mat, asking for "recent" papers points you to October, 2008. Asking for "new" papers gets you things like:

New submissions for Wed, 8 Jul 09

Error with 0907.1092
Error with 0907.1096
Error with 0907.1111
Very odd. Hopefully this will be fixed soon. Come to think of it, this is the first problem I've seen like this in a decade of reading cond-mat.

Wednesday, July 01, 2009

This week in cond-mat

There have been a number of exciting (to me, anyway) papers on the arxiv this past week. One in particular, though, seems like a neat illustration of a physical principal that crops up a lot in condensed matter physics.

arxiv:0906.5206 - Tanda et al., Aharonov-Bohm Effect at liquid-nitrogen temperature: Frohlich superconducting quantum device

There are several examples in condensed matter physics of "special" (I'll explain what I mean in a second) electronic ground states that are "gapped", meaning that the lowest energy excited states for the many-electron system are separated from the ground state by an energy range where there are no allowed states. When I say that a ground state is special, I mean that it has some particular order parameter (or broken symmetry) that is distinct from that of the excited states. In this sense, a band insulator or semiconductor is not special - the many-body filled valence band states really don't have any different symmetries than the empty conduction band states. However, the superconducting ground state is special, with broken gauge symmetry (when compared to the normal metallic state) and a minimum energy (the gap energy) required to make any excitations (in this case, by breaking apart a Cooper pair). Fractional quantum Hall states are similarly gapped. The consequence of that energy gap is that the ground state can be very robust. In particular, the gap means that low energy (compared to the gap) inelastic processes cannot perturb the system, since there are no allowed final states around. This is one reason why it is possible to see macroscopic quantum effects in superconductors, as long as T is small compared to the gap.

The authors of this paper have decided to see whether such macroscopic quantum effects (detectable via quantum interference measurements analogous to the two-slit experiment) can survive in another gapped system. The distinction here is that the special state is something called a charge density wave (CDW), where the electronic density in a material (in this case tantalum trisulfide) spontaneously takes on a spatially periodic modulation. This gapped state kicks in at much higher temperatures than typical superconducting transitions. The authors have been able to measure quantum interference robustly in their device at liquid nitrogen temperatures, which is pretty impressive, and there is reason to believe that this could be extended to room temperature. The sample fabrication is very impressive, by the way. You can't just take a sheet of this stuff and punch a hole in it to make your ring-shaped interferometer. Instead, you have to actually curl a sheet up into a tube. Neat stuff, and quite surprising to me. I need to read up more about CDWs....

Saturday, June 27, 2009

A cool result

There's a new asap paper in Nano Letters that is very slick. There has been a lot of interest in the last few years in plasmonics - the controlled manipulation of plasmons, collective oscillations of the electronic fluid in metals. Plasmons are pretty remarkable excitations. Because they involve displacement of the electron density, they necessarily result in local electric fields near metal surfaces (useful for optical antenna sorts of effects), and they can (under the right circumstances) couple efficiently to electromagnetic radiation. Plasmon response to light can be very pronounced, ranging from resonant scattering or absorption (for example, why certain types of glass are colored) to more complex dispersive effects, including negative (effective) indices of refraction. Plasmons are also responsible for helping light to transmit through sub-wavelength apertures. However, as far as I know, until now none of these effects have depended in any significant way on the angular momentum of light. In this new result, researchers from the Technion in Israel have designed aperture structures that can couple selectively to left- or right-circularly polarized light. The trick is in finding a situation such that the angular momentum of the light (essentially the spin of the photons) couples selectively to plasmon modes in the apertures that have matching orbital angular momentum. I don't fully understand how the two experiments described in the paper work, but it's a neat, clever result.

Monday, June 22, 2009

Four items

Four items, and a physics post later in the week.
  • Is "just-in-time" supply chain management truly the work of the devil, or merely incredibly annoying? We've had a problem with a gate valve on a piece of cleanroom equipment at my institution, and the vendor (a) has no spare valves; (b) has no spare parts for the valves; and (c) says it'll take around 4 weeks to fab a replacement valve. Now, I understand why a business wouldn't want a huge inventory sitting on shelves, and that there are real fixed costs associated with inventories. Still, how hard would it be to have some spare parts, particularly when these things don't go bad when stored? I can tell you that it doesn't make me predisposed to ever buy anything from this supplier again. So, while it may be penny-wise, it sure feels pound-foolish for companies to alienate customers by having no backup supplies at all.
  • Ahh, scientific publishing. Two folks from Cornell used an amusing computer program to generate a grammatically correct but completely nonsensical fake paper (pdf). They then got that paper accepted to an open-access journal, without the knowledge of the editor (!), with the strong implication being that this publisher was willing to publish literally anything as long as the authors are willing to pay the fees. Wonderful. I've suspected for a while (basically when a couple of publishers spammed me about being a contributing editor on journals I'd never heard of, back when I was a brand new assistant prof) that there are some shady practices out there.
  • Also regarding scientific publishing, I was shocked and appalled (ok, not really, but certainly surprised) when I got the proofs of an article that we have coming out in Phys Rev B. Why? Because it was clear from the marked-up "author query" version of the manuscript that the AIP production office had converted our beautiful LaTeX manuscript into Microsoft Word format for editing. What is the world coming to?!
  • Lastly, I was fortunate enough to receive a new iPod Touch as a gift. Anyone out there have suggestions for must-have apps?

Monday, June 15, 2009

The revolution will be twittered.

Not a physics post, but an observation. There is a major event going on in Iran right now - protests involving many thousands of people; rioting; the most political upheaval since the 1979 revolution. I hope that everything works out for the best - any country with a Supreme Leader needs a new governance structure, IMO. Anyway, twitter is being used as a major tool by the Iranian protesters. So much for my general perception that twitter was only for people more self-indulgent than bloggers (ahem.). It's fascinating and alarming to watch events unfold from halfway around the world, while CNN reports on things like Sarah Palin/David Letterman feuds. It's as though the "news" network has forgotten what real news is....

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Nanoscale, the book

No, I have not compiled my blog postings into dead-tree format. Nor have I finished my textbook based on my graduate nanoscale physics course sequence. Instead, I wanted to point out this book, which is a cute volume with lots of computer-rendered pictures of crystal structures and the like. It's an admirable attempt to give the reader a sense of the atomic-scale composition of materials, along with brief, informative, often fun descriptions. While there are a few minor typos that seem to be caused by autocorrection run amok, the book remains entertaining and educational, with very well crafted illustrations. The book has its own website, too.