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Coherent Spin Control of Single Molecules on a Surface
Author(s) -
Philip Willke,
Tobias Bilgeri,
Xue Zhang,
Yu Wang,
Christoph Wolf,
H. Aubin,
Andreas J. Heinrich,
Taeyoung Choi
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
acs nano
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.554
H-Index - 382
eISSN - 1936-086X
pISSN - 1936-0851
DOI - 10.1021/acsnano.1c06394
Subject(s) - spins , spintronics , scanning tunneling microscope , spin (aerodynamics) , quantum decoherence , quantum tunnelling , coherence (philosophical gambling strategy) , chemical physics , physics , materials science , condensed matter physics , nanotechnology , quantum , molecular physics , quantum mechanics , ferromagnetism , thermodynamics
Control of single electron spins constitutes one of the most promising platforms for spintronics, quantum sensing, and quantum information processing. Utilizing single molecular magnets as their hosts establishes an interesting framework since their molecular structure is highly flexible and chemistry-based large-scale synthesis directly provides a way toward scalability. Here, we demonstrate coherent spin manipulation of single molecules on a surface, which we control individually using a scanning tunneling microscope in combination with electron spin resonance. We previously found that iron phthalocyanine (FePc) molecules form a spin-1/2 system when placed on an insulating thin film of magnesium oxide (MgO). Performing Rabi oscillation and Hahn echo measurements, we show that the FePc spin can be coherently manipulated with a phase coherence time T 2 Echo of several hundreds of nanoseconds. Tunneling current-dependent measurements demonstrate that interaction with the tunneling electrons is the dominating source of decoherence. In addition, we perform Hahn echo measurements on small self-assembled arrays of FePc molecules. We show that, despite additional intermolecular magnetic coupling, spin resonance and T 2 Echo are much less perturbed by T 1 spin flip events of neighboring spins than by the tunneling current. This will potentially allow for individual addressable molecular spins in self-assemblies and with application for quantum information processing.

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