Janus graphene nanoribbons with a single ferromagnetic zigzag edge
Shaotang Song, Yu Teng, Weichen Tang, Zhen Xu, Yuanyuan He, Jiawei, Ruan, Takahiro Kojima, Wenping Hu, Franz J Giessibl, Hiroshi Sakaguchi,, Steven G Louie, Jiong Lu

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel design and fabrication method for Janus graphene nanoribbons with a single ferromagnetic zigzag edge, enabling new quantum spin phenomena and potential quantum electronic applications.
Contribution
It presents a general approach to create asymmetric ferromagnetic GNRs by topological defect engineering, breaking symmetry to realize ferromagnetic edges.
Findings
Successful fabrication of Janus GNRs with ferromagnetic edges
Confirmation of ferromagnetic ground state via microscopy and DFT
Demonstration of symmetry breaking leading to magnetic edge states
Abstract
Topological design of pi-electrons in zigzag-edged graphene nanoribbons (ZGNRs) leads to a wealth of magnetic quantum phenomena and exotic quantum phases. Symmetric ZGNRs typically exhibit antiferromagnetically coupled spin-ordered edge states. Eliminating cross-edge magnetic coupling in ZGNRs not only enables the realization of a new class of ferromagnetic quantum spin chains, enabling the exploration of quantum spin physics and entanglement of multiple qubits in the 1D limit, but also establishes a long-sought carbon-based ferromagnetic transport channel, pivotal for ultimate scaling of GNR-based quantum electronics. However, designing such GNRs entails overcoming daunting challenges, including simultaneous breaking of structural and spin symmetries, and designing elegant precursors for asymmetric fabrication of reactive zigzag edges. Here, we report a general approach for designing…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsPickering emulsions and particle stabilization · Supramolecular Self-Assembly in Materials · Supercapacitor Materials and Fabrication
