MRSEC researchers have discovered a missing spatial operation in nature called rotation-reversal symmetry that reverses the sense of all static rotations in a crystal. Certain minerals, organic crystals or metamaterials are composed of subunits that can exist in two states: clockwise or counter-clockwise rotated. The symmetry of a crystal lattice helps determine the material’s properties, and certain properties can only exist in lattices with special symmetries. In perovskite complex oxides, for example, oxygen cages counter-rotate (see image); these crystals have twice as many new “roto” symmetries as previously recognized These new symmetries imply new materials properties: lattice rotation coupled to magnetism, ferroelectricity, multiferroicity, charge ordering, elasticity, and optical. These properties could be useful in electrical control of magnetism, high-speed transistors based on correlated phenomena and high-temperature actuators.
Penn State Center for Nanoscale Science (2020)
The Center for Nanoscale Science supports collaborative, interdisciplinary research efforts on nanoscale materials. Principal research activities are organized into two interdisciplinary research groups: 2D Polar Metals & Heterostructures and Crystalline Oxides with High Entropy. Center-initiated programs encourage collaborative partnerships with science museums and non-R1 universities as well as engagement in outreach, education, and workforce development initiatives.