Introducing the Phoniton: a tool for controlling sound at the quantum level

Researchers now have the ability to construct increasingly complex artificial quantum systems, with profound implications for science and technology. In recent work, researchers at the University of Maryland and the Laboratory for Physical Sciences explore the possibility of a new, man-made, quantum object: a hybridization of a localized, long-lived phonon (a quantum of sound) and a matter excitation. That this is possible is not obvious. Analogous to the case of cavity-QED where a photon can strongly couple with a matter excitation and become a polariton (a half-light, half-matter quasiparticle), here a phonon in a crystal plays the part of the photon. Presented in the December 2nd issue of Physical Review Letters ("Sound-based analogue of cavity quantum electrodynamics"), Soykal et al. show that similar hybrid objects based on sound and matter, dubbed "phonitons", are possible as well. The phoniton can augment existing tools to manipulate quantized vibrations in nanoscale mechanical systems, help us further understand the nature of sound and heat at the quantum level, and serve as a base component in new macroscopic artificial quantum systems.

The study of the strong interaction of light and matter at the quantum level, collectively known as cavity quantum electrodynamics, has been a prominent area of study since the 1980's. In the canonical system, an atom couples with a photon trapped between two mirrors. This effect can also occur in materials, where a photon trapped in a cavity can join with an atomic excitation and form a new quasiparticle. These photon/matter hybrid objects are typically called polaritons. Cavity-QED and polaritonics have become tools for exploring and harnessing quantum physics with many applications, from entangling distant qubits to simulating quantum systems. UMD postdoctoral fellows Rusko Ruskov and Oney Soykal in the group of Charles Tahan, at the Laboratory for Physical Sciences, have explored how to replicate this effect with sound instead of light in a solid-state system. The task is difficult because sound at the quantum level (a phonon) is a collective excitation itself --- dependent on it's host material --- and is generally harder to control and less robust than a photon. Soykal et al. provide theoretical verification that this effect is possible in a silicon system, compatible with present-day nanoscale fabrication techniques.

The key to this new system is knowledge of the unique properties of impurity atoms in silicon and the potential for high-quality, silicon-based mechanical devices. To make a high quality phonon cavity to trap a single phonon one generally needs long-wavelength acoustic phonons (even in perfect quality silicon) - which are much larger than the lattice constant. Yet most transitions of impurity "atoms" in silicon are high in energy, leading to phonon transitions with wavelengths that are too short. Soykal et al. have utilized a transition unique to silicon donors, called a valley state, that has a wavelength both amenable to high-Q phonon cavities and strong phonon-impurity coupling.

The impurity atoms in silicon that form the levels of the "atom" need to be driven only by phonons (not photons), and interact strongly with them, to form the new quantum hybrid particle. The Letter shows theoretically that in certain parameter regimes, robust phonon-matter coupling is possible. In analogy with polaritons, the authors call this new object a "phoniton" (from the greek "phon-" for sound). The effect is experimentally realizable in existing systems and authors suggest several techniques for observation. The growing field of opto-/nano-mechanics is poised to perform these experiments.

The progression of quantum technology relies in part on the identification and control of components, such as confined electrons or photons, from which systems of greater complexity are built. The phoniton system promises a new tool for controlling nanoscale mechanical systems: storing phonons, transferring phonon information to solid-state qubits like electron spins, enabling new solid-state devices and many-body systems based on quantum sound. Tahan and his group are working on implementing the phoniton in other systems for ease of implementation as well as on new applications.

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The Laboratory for Physical Sciences (LPS) in College Park is a center for collaborative research between university and federal government scientists. The laboratory currently houses research in quantum computing, nanotechnology, polymers, optics, wireless systems, magnetics, microelectronics integration, and molecular beam epitaxy.

Nobelist Daniel Tsui to Receive 2011 Prange Prize

Condensed Matter Theory Lecture Set for Oct. 25 at UMD

COLLEGE PARK, Md. -- Nobel laureate Daniel C. Tsui of Princeton University has been named the 2011 recipient of the Richard E. Prange Prize and Lectureship in Condensed Matter Theory and Related Areas. Dr. Tsui will receive a $10,000 honorarium and deliver a public presentation entitled “More Is Indeed Different: An Example from Electron Physics in Semiconductors” at the University of Maryland, College Park, on Oct. 25, 2011.  He was awarded the 1998 Nobel Prize in physics with Horst Stormer for experimental work in 1982 leading to the discovery of the fractional quantum Hall effect in semiconductors.   The fractional quantum Hall effect is an emergent property of macroscopic matter similar to superconductivity or magnetism. The phenomenon has profoundly affected the theoretical understanding of how nature organizes large collections of interacting electrons, giving birth to the subject of “topological condensed matter physics”.

The Prange Prize, established by the UMD Department of Physics and Condensed Matter Theory Center (CMTC), honors the late Professor Richard Prange, whose distinguished professorial career at Maryland spanned four decades (1961-2000). The Prange Prize is made possible by a gift from Dr. Prange's wife, Dr. Madeleine Joullié of the University of Pennsylvania.

Dr. Tsui, a native of China’s Henan Province, received his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago in 1967. He then accepted a research job at Bell Laboratories in Murray Hill, New Jersey, where he specialized in the physics of two-dimensional electrons in semiconductor structures.  In 1982 he moved to Princeton University, where he is the Arthur LeGrand Doty Professor of Electrical Engineering. Dr. Tsui is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and a fellow of the American Physical Society and of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He has received the APS Buckley Prize and the Franklin Institute’s Benjamin Franklin Medal in physics. His Prange Prize lecture will be delivered at the University of Maryland's John S. Toll Physics Building at 4:00 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 25 in the Lecture Hall, Room 1412. The event is open to the public.

Dr. Richard Prange also received his doctorate at the University of Chicago, where he worked with Nobelist Yoichiro Nambu, among others. He is well known as the editor of a highly-respected book on the quantum Hall effect and for his own theoretical contributions to the subject. But his interests extended into all aspects of theoretical physics. He was at complete ease discussing topics as disparate as ferromagnetism and the cosmological constant.

"Richard enjoyed a fascinating and fulfilling career at the University of Maryland exploring condensed matter physics, and even after retirement was active in the department," said Dr. Joullié. "He spent the very last afternoon of his life in the lecture hall for a colloquium on graphene, followed by a vigorous discussion. And so I was happy to institute the Prange Prize, to generate its own robust discussions in condensed matter theory."

Dr. Prange was a member of the Maryland condensed matter theory group for more than 40 years and was an affiliate of CMTC since its inception in 2002.

"The Prange Prize provides a unique opportunity to acknowledge transformative work in condensed-matter theory, a field that has proven to be an inexhaustible source of insights and discoveries in both fundamental and applied physics, said Dr. Sankar Das Sarma, who holds the Richard E. Prange Chair in Physics at UMD and is also a Distinguished University Professor and Director of the CMTC.

The prize was inaugurated in 2009, with a lecture by Nobel Laureate Philip W. Anderson. Nobelist Walter Kohn received the second Prange Prize in 2010.

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