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Prof. Dmitri Efetov in his cleanroom at LMU
Photo Credit: © LMU
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: Quantum Twisting Microscope
The Core Concept: The Quantum Twisting Microscope (QTM) is a highly sensitive instrument capable of directly observing and mapping hidden electron-electron interactions within two-dimensional materials at room temperature.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Conventional platforms for studying moiré materials require painstakingly assembled, fixed twist angles that are highly susceptible to imperfections like strain and disorder. The QTM radically departs from this by mechanically separating 2D layers and rotating them in place, enabling continuous, dynamic control of the twist angle. The LMU team enhanced this mechanism by incorporating a hexagonal boron nitride tunneling layer to dramatically increase the instrument's resolution.
Major Frameworks/Components:
- Moiré Materials: Atomically thin, two-dimensional layered structures (such as graphene) that are stacked with a slight rotational misalignment to create interference patterns that reshape electron movement.
- Dynamic Twist Control: The mechanical capability to continuously adjust the rotational angle between atomic layers rather than relying on static fabrication.
- Hexagonal Boron Nitride Tunneling Layer: An integrated layer utilized to detect subtle deviations from ideal linear energy spectrums, visualizing electron interactions as distinct features in tunneling maps.




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