Publications by authors named "Jessica L McChesney"

Article Synopsis
  • The study explores the behavior of rare earth nickelates (RENiO) during a phase transition from metal to insulator, focusing on how electron-lattice interactions lead to bond disproportionation and spin order among nickel and ligand spins.
  • Researchers investigated a hypothesis that self-doped ligand holes create local spin moments that couple antiferromagnetically with Ni spins, leading to long-range bond and spin order, specifically in NdNiO thin films.
  • Using magnetic resonant X-ray scattering, the study found spiral spin patterns in the material that show an unexpected chiral magnetic configuration, hinting at a possible link between this noncollinear magnetic state and unusual ferroelectric characteristics.
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Electronic flat-band materials host quantum states characterized by a quenched kinetic energy. These flat bands are often conducive to enhanced electron correlation effects and emergent quantum phases of matter. Long studied in theoretical models, these systems have received renewed interest after their experimental realization in van der Waals heterostructures and quasi-two-dimensional (2D) crystalline materials.

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Bulk SrTiO is a well-known band insulator and the most common substrate used in the field of complex oxide heterostructures. Its surface and interface with other oxides, however, have demonstrated a variety of remarkable behaviors distinct from those expected. In this work, using a suite of in situ techniques to monitor both the atomic and electronic structures of the SrTiO (001) surface prior to and during growth, the disappearance and re-appearance of a 2D electron gas (2DEG) is observed after the completion of each SrO and TiO monolayer, respectively.

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Habituation and sensitization (nonassociative learning) are among the most fundamental forms of learning and memory behavior present in organisms that enable adaptation and learning in dynamic environments. Emulating such features of intelligence found in nature in the solid state can serve as inspiration for algorithmic simulations in artificial neural networks and potential use in neuromorphic computing. Here, we demonstrate nonassociative learning with a prototypical Mott insulator, nickel oxide (NiO), under a variety of external stimuli at and above room temperature.

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New developments in the field of topological matter are often driven by materials discovery, including novel topological insulators, Dirac semimetals, and Weyl semimetals. In the last few years, large efforts have been made to classify all known inorganic materials with respect to their topology. Unfortunately, a large number of topological materials suffer from non-ideal band structures.

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Van der Waals (vdW) materials with magnetic order have been heavily pursued for fundamental physics as well as for device design. Despite the rapid advances, so far, they are mainly insulating or semiconducting, and none of them has a high electronic mobility-a property that is rare in layered vdW materials in general. The realization of a high-mobility vdW material that also exhibits magnetic order would open the possibility for novel magnetic twistronic or spintronic devices.

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Experimental validation of the predicted melt phase behavior of A/B mixed brush on planar substrate is presented using poly(methyl methacrylate) (A)/ polystyrene (B) (PMMA/PS) with equal number of A/B chains as an example. Well-defined mixed A/B brushes are synthesized using a single component inimer coating to achieve high grafting density (0.9 chains/nm), uniformity of grafting sites, and predictable chain length.

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Here we show, with simultaneous transport and photoemission measurements, that the graphene-terminated SiC(0001) surface undergoes a metal-insulator transition upon dosing with small amounts of atomic hydrogen. We find the room temperature resistance increases by about 4 orders of magnitude, a transition accompanied by anomalies in the momentum-resolved spectral function including a non-Fermi-liquid behavior and a breakdown of the quasiparticle picture. These effects are discussed in terms of a possible transition to a strongly (Anderson) localized ground state.

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Graphene, a single monolayer of graphite, has recently attracted considerable interest owing to its novel magneto-transport properties, high carrier mobility and ballistic transport up to room temperature. It has the potential for technological applications as a successor of silicon in the post Moore's law era, as a single-molecule gas sensor, in spintronics, in quantum computing or as a terahertz oscillator. For such applications, uniform ordered growth of graphene on an insulating substrate is necessary.

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