Observation of fractional edge excitations in nanographene spin chains
Shantanu Mishra, Goncalo Catarina, Fupeng Wu, Ricardo Ortiz, David, Jacob, Kristjan Eimre, Ji Ma, Carlo A. Pignedoli, Xinliang Feng, Pascal, Ruffieux, Joaquin Fernandez-Rossier, Roman Fasel

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the fabrication and atomic-scale investigation of one-dimensional organic spin chains exhibiting fractional edge excitations, confirming their topological nature and potential for quantum computing applications.
Contribution
The paper reports the synthesis and direct observation of fractional edge states in organic S=1 spin chains, confirming their topological phase via experimental and theoretical analysis.
Findings
Observation of gapped spin excitations in organic chains
Detection of fractional S=1/2 edge states
Confirmation of the Haldane phase in synthesized chains
Abstract
Fractionalization is a phenomenon in which strong interactions in a quantum system drive the emergence of excitations with quantum numbers that are absent in the building blocks. Outstanding examples are excitations with charge e/3 in the fractional quantum Hall effect, solitons in one-dimensional conducting polymers and Majorana states in topological superconductors. Fractionalization is also predicted to manifest itself in low-dimensional quantum magnets, such as one-dimensional antiferromagnetic S = 1 chains. The fundamental features of this system are gapped excitations in the bulk and, remarkably, S = 1/2 edge states at the chain termini, leading to a four-fold degenerate ground state that reflects the underlying symmetry-protected topological order. Here, we use on-surface synthesis to fabricate one-dimensional spin chains that contain the S = 1 polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon…
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