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A clearer look at critical materials, thanks to refrigerator magnets

Phys.org Quantum Computing
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⚡ Quantum Brief
Yale researchers solved a decades-old ARPES limitation by using refrigerator magnet-inspired nanomagnetic arrays to study quantum materials under magnetic fields, enabling direct observation of electron behavior previously obscured by field interference. The breakthrough replaces single large magnets with a substrate of alternating-polarity micromagnets, confining the magnetic field to just tens of nanometers—allowing photoelectrons to travel unimpeded after brief nanosecond exposure. This method, detailed in The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters, unlocks ARPES for materials like unconventional superconductors and topological systems, which often require magnetic fields to activate or function in quantum computing and fusion applications. Collaboration across Yale, Rice University, Boston College, and Georgia Tech was critical, combining expertise in Halbach arrays, surface magnetism, and photoelectron trajectory analysis to refine the technique. The innovation could accelerate discoveries in field-induced phenomena like flatband superconductivity and magnetic vortices, previously inaccessible due to ARPES’s magnetic field incompatibility.
A clearer look at critical materials, thanks to refrigerator magnets

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February 2, 2026 by Yale University edited by Lisa Lock, reviewed by Robert Egan This article has been reviewed according to Science X's editorial process and policies. Editors have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility: fact-checked peer-reviewed publication trusted source proofread With an advanced technology known as angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES), scientists are able to map out a material's electron energy-momentum relationship, which encodes the material's electrical, optical, magnetic and thermal properties like an electronic DNA. But the technology has its limitations; it doesn't work well under a magnetic field. This is a major drawback for scientists who want to study materials that are deployed under or even actuated by magnetic fields.Inspired by refrigerator magnets, a team of Yale researchers may have found a solution. Their study was featured recently on the cover of The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters.Quantum materials—such as unconventional superconductors or topological materials—are considered critical to advancing quantum computing, high-efficiency electronics, nuclear fusion, and other fields. But many of them need to be used in the presence of a magnetic field, or even only become activated by magnetic fields. Being able to directly study the electronic structure of these materials in magnetic fields would be a huge help in better understanding how they work.Typically, ARPES technology can't measure electronic structures in a magnetic field because the magnetic field throws the photoelectrons off their natural trajectory and causes them to move in circles."So it becomes almost impossible to reconstruct the electron behavior in the solid based on what our detector sees," said Yu He, assistant professor of applied physics. "It has been a long-standing challenge to directly measure electronic structures under a magnetic field. Without it, we're essentially blind to how the electronic states evolve under a magnetic field."It turns out the solution to this long-standing scientific challenge was hiding in plain sight—stuck to the doors of millions of refrigerators. Drawing inspiration from the common refrigerator magnets found in gift shops everywhere, He and his research team came up with a solution. Instead of using one large magnet, the researchers place the sample on a substrate made of many tiny magnets of alternating polarities."A fridge magnet sticks to the fridge door very strongly, but if you pull it off just a tiny bit, that attractive interaction goes away—it essentially falls off," said Wenxin Li, first author of the paper and a Ph.D. student in He's lab. "From afar, the magnetic field decays very quickly. But if you were to stay very close to the surface, the magnetic field is actually very strong."Li explained that their system constrains the magnetic field to just a few tens of nanometers above the material."And then it will essentially drop to zero beyond that," Li said. "And the photoemitted electron will only experience the magnetic field for nanoseconds, then the magnetic field is practically gone, and the electron will just continue in a straight line."This magnetic structure is akin to an industrial mainstay known as the Halbach array, and He said its introduction to quantum materials study is a serendipitous interdisciplinary adventure with many brilliant collaborators."We asked ourselves, how could one make nano-scale Halbach-like arrays? Well, we had a neighbor in Becton center—the Schiffer group—that is a world leader in this. We asked ourselves, how can we figure out the actual surface magnetic field and put quantum materials onto such an array? Our colleagues at Boston College and Georgia Tech—the Ma group and the Du group—came to our rescue," said He. "Then of course, our long-term collaborators at Rice university are indispensable to help ascertain the photoelectron trajectory through elegant analytical derivations."The researchers noted that this collaborative approach was key to the breakthrough."One should definitely keep an open mind in interdisciplinary research—a stone from another mountain may become your jade!" he said.Going forward, the researchers say their method could significantly open up research possibilities in their field."Understanding the electron behavior under a magnetic field in the past has been almost impossible with ARPES," He said. "With this development, we're really hoping that this opens the door to direct electronic investigations of many field-induced electronic phenomena such as flatband superconductivity and magnetic vortices."Wenxin Li et al, Sub-tesla On-Chip Nanomagnetic Metamaterial Platform for Angle-Resolved Photoemission Spectroscopy, The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters (2025). DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.5c03075 Journal information: Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters Provided by Yale University Feb 6, 20263Feb 6, 20260Feb 7, 20261Feb 6, 20260Feb 8, 202636 minutes ago6 minutes ago13 minutes ago15 minutes ago26 minutes ago46 minutes ago1 hour ago1 hour ago2 hours ago2 hours agoMar 30, 2021Apr 20, 2022Feb 24, 2022Nov 19, 2025Jun 19, 2025Dec 19, 20242 hours agoFeb 6, 2026Feb 6, 2026Feb 6, 2026Feb 6, 2026Feb 6, 2026

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Source: Phys.org Quantum Computing