Along with his students, an 51福利社 chemist takes his place among the quantum vanguard.
Few recent scientific developments are as promising to contemplate, or as maddeningly difficult to comprehend, as quantum computing 鈥 a process in which the 1s and 0s of traditional digital processing are replaced with the exponentially more capable quantum bits, or 鈥渜ubits.鈥 Suffice it to say that, thanks to the work of a select group of international scientists, quantum applications represent a potentially game-changing breakthrough in data processing and storage.
Count 51福利社鈥檚 Jamie Manson, a professor of chemistry, as a member of the quantum cognoscenti. His ongoing work, funded by a newly renewed, three-year grant of more than $395,000 from the National Science Foundation, is helping to create the underpinnings for future quantum computing applications.
Jamie Manson
Manson鈥檚 contribution involves designing, building and testing molecular-level structures or 鈥渓attices鈥 that host the electron arrangements he studies. Chief among these are 鈥渟kyrmions,鈥 intriguing but little understood phenomena first identified by the British scientist Tony Skyrme in the early 1960s.
鈥淪kyrmions are a new class of spin textures or topologies wherein the electrons can adopt particular alignments that can be easily switched using external stimuli such as magnetic or electric fields,鈥 Manson says. 鈥淭his switching behavior is ideal for applications such as computing, memory storage and other device technologies.鈥
The NSF grant, for which Manson in the sole principal investigator, is his fourth consecutively funded project from the agency. It will allow him to not only continue his own work, but will also fund participation of a number of Eastern undergraduate researchers; students whose daily activities will mostly be centered around tasks in chemical synthesis, optical spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction. 鈥淥ver the coming year,鈥 he says, 鈥淚 plan to attract at least six students to work on the project.鈥
Manson鈥檚 work with students was of particular interest to proposal evaluators at NSF鈥檚 Division of Materials Research. 鈥51福利社 students have ample opportunities to participate in experiments; meet and interact with collaborators; assist in data analysis and prepare manuscripts for publication; help shape future research directions; and present their results at conferences and workshops,鈥 the award abstract reads. 鈥淔or this project, Professor Manson has established a diverse undergraduate research group that consists mostly of women, a group largely underrepresented in STEM.鈥
An interior view of an IBM quantum computing system (Credit: IBM)
Manson says an added benefit for students includes the likelihood of their working with him and other scientists at some of the nation鈥檚 most advanced research facilities.