Pines' Demon
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

In
condensed matter physics Condensed matter physics is the field of physics that deals with the macroscopic and microscopic physical properties of matter, especially the solid and liquid State of matter, phases, that arise from electromagnetic forces between atoms and elec ...
, Pines' demon or, simply demon is a
collective excitation In condensed matter physics, a quasiparticle is a concept used to describe a collective behavior of a group of particles that can be treated as if they were a single particle. Formally, quasiparticles and collective excitations are closely relate ...
of electrons which corresponds to electrons in different energy bands moving out of phase with each other. Equivalently, a demon corresponds to counter-propagating currents of electrons from different bands. Named after
David Pines David Pines (June 8, 1924 May 3, 2018) was a US physicist recognized for his work in quantum many-body systems in condensed matter and nuclear physics. With his advisor David Bohm, he contributed to the understanding of electron interactions in ...
, who coined the term in 1956, demons are quantum mechanical excited states of a material belonging to a broader class of exotic
collective excitations In condensed matter physics, a quasiparticle is a concept used to describe a collective behavior of a group of particles that can be treated as if they were a single particle. Formally, quasiparticles and collective excitations are closely relate ...
, such as the
magnon A magnon is a quasiparticle, a collective excitation of the spin structure of an electron in a crystal lattice. In the equivalent wave picture of quantum mechanics, a magnon can be viewed as a quantized spin wave. Magnons carry a fixed amou ...
,
phason In physics, a phason is a form of collective excitation found in aperiodic crystal structures. Phasons are a type of quasiparticle: an emergent phenomenon of many-particle systems. The phason can also be seen as a degree of freedom unique to qua ...
, or
exciton An exciton is a bound state of an electron and an electron hole which are attracted to each other by the electrostatic Coulomb's law, Coulomb force resulting from their opposite charges. It is an electrically neutral quasiparticle regarded as ...
. Pines' demon was first experimentally observed in 2023 by A. A. Husain et al. within the transition-metal oxide
distrontium ruthenate Distrontium ruthenate, also known as strontium ruthenate, is an oxide of strontium and ruthenium with the chemical formula Sr2RuO4. It was the first reported perovskite superconductor that did not contain copper. Strontium ruthenate is structur ...
(Sr2RuO4).


History

Demons were originally theorized in 1956 by David Pines in the context of multiband metals with two energy bands: a heavy electron band with large effective mass m_d and a light electron band with effective mass m_s. In the limit of m_d \gg m_s, the two bands are ''kinematically'' decoupled, so electrons in one band are unable to scatter to the other band while conserving momentum and energy. Within this limit, Pines pointed out that the two bands can be thought of as two ''distinct'' species of charge particles, so that it becomes possible for excitations of the two bands to be either
in-phase In physics and mathematics, the phase (symbol φ or ϕ) of a wave or other periodic function F of some real variable t (such as time) is an angle-like quantity representing the fraction of the cycle covered up to t. It is expressed in such a s ...
or out-of-phase with each other. The in-phase excitation of the two bands was not a new type of excitation, it was simply the
plasmon In physics, a plasmon is a quantum of plasma oscillation. Just as light (an optical oscillation) consists of photons, the plasma oscillation consists of plasmons. The plasmon can be considered as a quasiparticle since it arises from the quant ...
, an excitation proposed earlier by
David Pines David Pines (June 8, 1924 May 3, 2018) was a US physicist recognized for his work in quantum many-body systems in condensed matter and nuclear physics. With his advisor David Bohm, he contributed to the understanding of electron interactions in ...
and
David Bohm David Joseph Bohm (; 20 December 1917 – 27 October 1992) was an American scientist who has been described as one of the most significant Theoretical physics, theoretical physicists of the 20th centuryDavid Peat Who's Afraid of Schrödinger' ...
in 1952 which explained peaks observed in early electron energy-loss spectra of solids. The ''out-of-phase'' excitation was termed the "demon" by Pines after
James Clerk Maxwell James Clerk Maxwell (13 June 1831 – 5 November 1879) was a Scottish physicist and mathematician who was responsible for the classical theory of electromagnetic radiation, which was the first theory to describe electricity, magnetism an ...
, since he thought Maxwell "lived too early to have a particle or excitation named in his honor." Pines explained his terminology by making the term a half
backronym A backronym is an acronym formed from an already existing word by expanding its letters into the words of a phrase. Backronyms may be invented with either serious or humorous intent, or they may be a type of false etymology or folk etymology. The ...
because particles commonly have suffix "-on" and the excitation involved distinct electron motion, resulting in D.E.M.on, or simply demon for short. The demon was historically referred to as an acoustic plasmon, due to its gapless nature which is also shared with acoustic
phonon A phonon is a collective excitation in a periodic, elastic arrangement of atoms or molecules in condensed matter, specifically in solids and some liquids. In the context of optically trapped objects, the quantized vibration mode can be defined a ...
s. However, with the rise of two-dimensional materials (such as
graphene Graphene () is a carbon allotrope consisting of a Single-layer materials, single layer of atoms arranged in a hexagonal lattice, honeycomb planar nanostructure. The name "graphene" is derived from "graphite" and the suffix -ene, indicating ...
) and
surface plasmon Surface plasmons (SPs) are coherent delocalized electron oscillations that exist at the interface between any two materials where the real part of the dielectric function changes sign across the interface (e.g. a metal-dielectric interface, such ...
s, the term acoustic plasmon has taken on a very different meaning as the ordinary plasmon in a low-dimensional system. Such acoustic plasmons are distinct from the demon because they do not consist of out-of-phase currents from different bands, do not exist in ''bulk'' materials, and do couple to light, unlike the demon. A more detailed comparison of plasmons and demons is shown in the table below. The demon excitation, unlike the plasmon, was only discovered many decades later in 2023 by A. A. Husain et al. in the unconventional superconducting material Sr2RuO4 using a momentum-resolved variant of high-resolution electron energy-loss spectroscopy.


Relationship with the plasmon

The plasmon is a quantized vibration of the charge density in a material where all electron bands move ''in-phase''. The plasmon is also ''massive'' (i.e., has an energy gap) in ''bulk'' materials due to the energy cost needed to overcome the long-ranged Coulomb interaction, with the energy cost being the
plasma frequency Plasma oscillations, also known as Langmuir waves (after Irving Langmuir), are rapid oscillations of the electron density in conducting media such as plasmas or metals in the ultraviolet region. The oscillations can be described as an instability ...
\omega_p. Plasmons exist in all conducting materials and play a dominant role in shaping the
dielectric function In electromagnetism, the absolute permittivity, often simply called permittivity and denoted by the Greek letter (epsilon), is a measure of the electric polarizability of a dielectric material. A material with high permittivity polarizes more ...
of a metal at optical frequencies. Historically, plasmons were observed as early as 1941 by G. Ruthemann. The behavior of plasmons has widespread implications,as they play a role as a tool for biological microscopy ( surface plasmon resonance microscopy), plasmon-based electronics (
plasmonics Plasmonics or nanoplasmonics refers to the generation, detection, and manipulation of signals at optical frequencies along metal-dielectric interfaces in the nanometer scale. Inspired by photonics, plasmonics follows the trend of miniaturizing op ...
), and underlay the original formulation of the transmission-line with a junction plasmon (
transmon In quantum computing, and more specifically in superconducting quantum computing, a transmon is a type of Superconductivity, superconducting charge qubit designed to have reduced sensitivity to charge noise. The transmon was developed by Jens Koch ...
) device now used in superconducting qubits for
quantum computing A quantum computer is a computer that exploits quantum mechanical phenomena. On small scales, physical matter exhibits properties of wave-particle duality, both particles and waves, and quantum computing takes advantage of this behavior using s ...
. The demon excitation on the other hand holds a number key distinctions from the plasmon (and acoustic plasmon), as summarized in the table below.


Theoretical significance

Early studies of the demon in the context of superconductivity showed, under the two band picture presented by Pines, that superconducting pairing of the light electron band can be enhanced through the existence of demons, while the pairing of the heavy electrons would be more or less unaffected. The implication being that demons would allow for ''orbital-selective'' effects on superconducting pairing. However, for the simple case of spherically symmetric metals with two bands, natural realizations of demon-enhanced superconductivity seemed unlikely, as the heavy (d-)electrons play the dominant role in superconductivity of most transition metal considered at the time. However, more recent studies on high-temperature superconducting metal hydrides, where light electron bands participate in superconductivity, suggest demons may be playing an active role in such systems.


References

{{Reflist Quasiparticles