Speaker & Supervisor
Prof. CHENG Guang-lei
Title: Correlated Oxide Nanoelectronics
Abstract:
The strong electron-electron interaction in the transitional metal oxides gives rise to a dizzying array of novel phenomena that are not present in conventional semiconductor systems. Meanwhile, semiconductors are clean and dilute enough for nanoelectronic applications which are hard to achieve in oxides. Here I present the concept of correlated oxide nanoelectronics to bridge the gap between semiconductor nanoelectronics and strongly correlated phenomena in oxides. I will give out several examples to show such combination has great advantages: 1) Nanoelectric tools are powerful to study correlated phenomena; and in return 2) Electron correlations add richness of properties to nanoelectronic devices. Specifically, I will talk about quantum transport study of electron correlations in superconducting single electron transistors and electron waveguides at the LaAlO3/SrTiO3 interface. Then, I will talk briefly on our recent progress on material design and transport study on 1D oxide nanowires. Finally, I envision possible future applications in quantum technologies.
Curriculum Vitae:
Education:
Ph.D. in Physics University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh 04/2011
Employment:
University of Science and Technology of China Professor in Department of Modern Physics 09/ 2016 Current
Pittsburgh Quantum Institute and University of Pittsburgh Research Assistant Professor 09/2014 – 08/2016
Research interests:
•Quantum Nanoelec:tronics
Quantum transport and solid-state quantum simulation at complex oxide interfaces
Conductive atomic force microscopy based device fabrication
•Visualizing Quantum States of Matter
mK scanning probe microscopy with microwave and optical imaging capabilities
Scanning Nano-SQUID Microscopy
Publications:
• “Quantized Ballistic Transport of Electrons and Electron Pairs in LaAl0:1/SrTi0:1 Nanowires” Anil Annadi, ‘Hyungwoo Lee, Jung-vVoo Lee, Shicheng Lu, Anthony Tylan Tyler, Megan Briggeman, Michelle Tomczyk, Mengchen Huang, David Pekker, Chang-Beom Eom, Patrick Irvin, and Jeremy Levy18, 4473 (2018).