(Funded by the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Energy)
Researchers from Penn State and the National Institute for Materials Science in Japan have created a switch that turns on and off the presence of “kink states” – electrical conduction pathways at the edge of semiconducting materials. By controlling the formation of the kink states, researchers can regulate the flow of electrons in a quantum system. Kink states exist in a quantum device built with a bilayer graphene, which comprises two layers of atomically thin carbon stacked together, in such a way that the atoms in one layer are misaligned to the atoms in the other. “The amazing thing about our devices is that we can make electrons moving in opposite directions not collide with one another … even though they share the same pathways,” said Ke Huang, one of the scientists involved in this study.
https://www.psu.edu/news/research/story/kink-state-control-may-provide-pathway-quantum-electronics/