Researchers at the University of Twente and Utrecht University demonstrated for the first time that quantum states in the ultra-narrow material germanene can be switched on and off using only an electric field. The researchers were able to vary the electric field strength very precisely, causing the special ‘topological’ states in nanoribbons to disappear or appear.
The research, titled “Electric-Field Control of Zero-Dimensional Topological States in Ultranarrow Germanene Nanoribbons,” is published in Physical Review Letters.
Quantum computers will not use zeros and ones, but instead use quantum bits that can assume both states simultaneously. In theory, this makes them superfast and powerful, but in practice, building quantum bits is an enormous challenge: they are very sensitive to noise and quickly lose their information.









