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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Phark, S. hyon, Bui, H. T., Ferrón, A., Fernández-Rossier, J., Reina-Gálvez, J., Wolf, C., … Lutz, C. P. (2023). Electric-Field-Driven Spin Resonance by On-Surface Exchange Coupling to a Single-Atom Magnet. Advanced Science, 10(27). https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202302033

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