
The electronic instabilities in CsV3Sb5 are believed to originate from the V 3d-electrons on the kagome plane, however the role of Sb 5p-electrons for 3-dimensional orders is largely unexplored.
The electronic instabilities in CsV3Sb5 are believed to originate from the V 3d-electrons on the kagome plane, however the role of Sb 5p-electrons for 3-dimensional orders is largely unexplored.
– Materials in which you can manipulate the proportion of oxide ions are considered good candidates for the development of devices that employ ionotronics (powerful tools and methods for narrowing the gap between conventional electronics and biological
Understanding the effects of electronic frustration on the kagome lattice is a very active area in correlated materials physics.
First inelastic neutron scattering measurements of phason mean free paths (or lifetimes) in conjunction with phonon and thermal conductivity measurements, establish that phasons make the major contribution to the thermal conductivity of fresnoite at roo
The shape-memory effect of two photon polymerization (TPP)-fabricated microfibers in water was revealed and precisely quantified using a novel tensile testing method.
A multimodal scanning probe microscopy (SPM) approach reveals fast ionically mediated electromechanical coupling in the van der Waals ferroelectric CuInP2S6 (CIPS) along with an enhanced and tunable conductivity at chemical phase b
Our investigations on bulk CrCl3 phonons suggest that in-plane spins are essential but specific spin configurations do not matter, which provides insights into recent magnetic-field-dependent thermal transport measurements.
Polymeric liquids exhibit complex and fascinating flow behavior. Despite the remarkable theoretical progress brought about by the tube model, understanding the molecular dynamics of long-chain molecules under flow still faces formidable challenges.
Magnetic skyrmions are topologically-nontrivial spin textures with potentially transformative applications in quantum computing and information storage. Skyrmions usually occur in crystals without a center of inversion symmetry.