3 research outputs found

    Utilizing a single atom magnet and oscillating electric fields to coherently drive magnetic resonance in single atoms

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    Scanning tunneling microscopes (STM) equipped with pulsed electron spin resonance (ESR) have paved a way to coherently control individual atomic and molecular spins on surfaces. A recent breakthrough was to drive ESR of a spin outside the tunnel junction by locating a single atom magnet in proximity to a qubit, composing a 'spin-magnet pair'. Here we present a combined experimental and model study on the ESR driving mechanism in such a spin-magnet pair. Pulsed ESR of a single hydrogenated Ti atom on MgO with an Fe atom located between 6 and 8 {\AA} away showed a non-vanishing Rabi rate even when the tip is substantially retracted, comparable in strength with that driven by the interaction with the tip's magnetic moment under normal tunnel conditions. We reveal that this ESR driving field is contributed by Fe through the spin-spin interaction in the pair and show its tunability using a vector magnetic field. The spin-magnet pair therefore expands ESR-STM to address and coherently control on-surface atomic and molecular spins independent of the tip's magnetic apex. Together with existing atom manipulation techniques in STM, our study establishes a feasible method to design spin-based multi-qubit systems on surfaces

    Influence of the Magnetic Tip on Heterodimers in Electron Spin Resonance Combined with Scanning Tunneling Microscopy

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    Investigating the quantum properties of individual spins adsorbed on surfaces by electron spin resonance combined with scanning tunneling microscopy (ESR-STM) has shown great potential for the development of quantum information technology on the atomic scale. A magnetic tip exhibiting high spin polarization is critical for performing an ESR-STM experiment. While the tip has been conventionally treated as providing a static magnetic field in ESR-STM, it was found that the tip can exhibit bistability, influencing ESR spectra. Ideally, the ESR splitting caused by the magnetic interaction between two spins on a surface should be independent of the tip. However, we found that the measured ESR splitting of a metal atom-molecule heterodimer can be tip-dependent. Detailed theoretical analysis reveals that this tip-dependent ESR splitting is caused by a different interaction energy between the tip and each spin of the heterodimer. Our work provides a comprehensive reference for characterizing tip features in ESR-STM experiments and highlights the importance of employing a proper physical model when describing the ESR tip, in particular, for heterospin systems.11Nsciescopu

    Electric‐Field‐Driven Spin Resonance by On‐Surface Exchange Coupling to a Single‐Atom Magnet

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    Abstract Coherent control of individual atomic and molecular spins on surfaces has recently been demonstrated by using electron spin resonance (ESR) in a scanning tunneling microscope (STM). Here, a combined experimental and modeling study of the ESR of a single hydrogenated Ti atom that is exchange‐coupled to a Fe adatom positioned 0.6–0.8 nm away by means of atom manipulation is presented. Continuous wave and pulsed ESR of the Ti spin show a Rabi rate with two contributions, one from the tip and the other from the Fe, whose spin interactions with Ti are modulated by the radio‐frequency electric field. The Fe contribution is comparable to the tip, as revealed by its dominance when the tip is retracted, and tunable using a vector magnetic field. The new ESR scheme allows on‐surface individual spins to be addressed and coherently controlled without the need for magnetic interaction with a tip. This study establishes a feasible implementation of spin‐based multi‐qubit systems on surfaces
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