Nebraska Center for Materials and Nanoscience podcast artwork

PODCAST

Nebraska Center for Materials and Nanoscience

The Nebraska Center for Materials and Nanoscience (NCMN) is the nanoscience research center at the University of Nebraska.

  1. 12

    Quantum and Nonlinear Magnonics

    Gregory Fuchs of Cornell University gave this NCMN/EQUATE seminar on April 15, 2026. Abstract: As we progress more deeply into the second quantum revolution, a natural question we ask is, is there a role for magnonics in quantum information platforms? Building on a decade of foundational work on this progress, I will discuss my take on this question and our efforts to develop new the roles for magnonics in quantum and classical technologies. For quantum technologies, a major challenge is mitigating loss, since loss is the enemy of quantum coherence. First, I’ll describe our efforts to establish a scalable cavity magnonics platform based on the ultra-low loss organic based magnet vanadium tetracyanoethylene V[TCNE]x. We demonstrate strong coupling with cooperativities exceeding 1000 and material damping in patterned films that competes with single crystal yttrium iron garnet (YIG) spheres [1]. I’ll also discuss some of the material challenges, including the heterogenous integration of an air-sensitive material. We show that atomic layer deposition of alumina is an effective encapsulate that introduces negligible microwave loss [2]. Furthermore, I’ll discuss our approach to a cavity-magnonics implementation of the optomechanical-type nonlinear Hamiltonian [3]. Using this nonlinear interaction, we theoretically show how driving magnons that are coupled to a microwave electromagnetic resonator can enable resonator cooling and quantum squeezing. Finally, I’ll describe our recent working using scanning NV center probes to understand nonlinear harmonic generation of magnons in magnetic spin textures. We image harmonic generation within the local spin texture of Ni81Fe19/Pt bilayers to establish the microscopic mechanism of this phenomenon and its relationship to more familiar harmonic generation in nonlinear optics. References: [1] Q. Xu, H. F. H. Cheung, D. S. Cormode, T. O. Puel, S. Pal, H. Yusuf, M. Chilcote, M. E. Flatté, E. Johnston-Halperin, and G. D. Fuchs, Adv. Sci. 11, 2310032 (2024) [2] M. I. B. Utama, R. Claassen, S. Pal, D. S. Cormode, D. Lebedev, S. Chaudhuri, Q. Xu, H. Y. Park, S. D. Namgung, G. C. Schatz, G. D. Fuchs, E. Johnston-Halperin, and M. C. Hersam, Nat. Commun. 16, 10546 (2025) [3] Q. Xu and G. D. Fuchs, Phys. Rev. B 111, 134440 (2025) [4] A. J. D'Addario, K. Hu, M. W. Olszewski, D. C. Ralph, M. E. Flatté, K. C. Nowack, and G. D. Fuchs, arXiv:2603.14082 (2026). Bio: Fuchs earned his Ph.D. in Applied Physics from Cornell University in 2007 where he was led one of two teams to first demonstrate spin-transfer torque switching in magnetic tunnel junctions – a technology that later formed the write mechanism for modern magnetic random access memory technologies. Afterward, he moved to the University of California, Santa Barbara as a postdoctoral associate where he changed research topics to focus on spin dynamics of diamond nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers. In 2011, he joined the Cornell faculty of Applied and Engineering Physics. In 2012 he received a Young Investigator Award from the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, in 2013 he received an Early Faculty Career Award from the National Science Foundation along with the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers, and in 2014 he received the Early Career Award from the Department of Energy. In 2025 he was elected a fellow of the American Physical Society and named the inaugural James R. Meehl Professor of Applied and Engineering Physics. Fuchs’s current research group focuses on quantum interactions between spins, magnons, photons, and phonons in solidstate systems, drawing inspiration from atomic physics, condensed matter physics, and materials engineering. Fuchs uses NV centers for quantum sensors, including to study magnetic materials, devices, and dynamics. Recently, Fuchs has studied magnetism in the quantum limit at low temperature by strongly coupling low-damping magnetic materials to superconducting resonators. His group also pioneered the use of gigahertz lattice strain from diamond micro-electromechanical devices to manipulate the quantum states of diamond NV centers. Fuchs has explored these interactions to extend spin coherence, coherently engineer optical transitions, and enable new sensing modalities. In addition to diamond, Fuchs studies the optical properties of quantum emitters in other materials including gallium nitride and hexagonal boron nitride. Recently, Fuchs has become interested in materials for superconducting quantum circuits, especially new tunnel barrier materials for Josephson junctions.

  2. 11

    Precision Measurement and Spectroscopy with Diamond NV Centers

    Abstract: Color centers in wide-bandgap semiconductors have emerged as a leading platform in the field of quantum sensing, broadly defined as the use of qubits to measure environmental parameters. In my lab at the University of New Mexico, we are using Nitrogen-Vacancy (NV) centers in diamond to image magnetic phenomena in condensed-matter and biological systems over a broad range of length scales. At the nanometer scale, we are building super-resolution magnetic microscopes to image magnetic nanoparticles with 50-100 nm resolution [1]. At the micrometer scale, we embed diamond sensors inside microfluidic chips to perform nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy at the scale of single cells [2]. At the millimeter scale, we are developing femtotesla-level magnetometers [3], with potential applications in medical imaging, navigation, and even dark matter detection. I will provide an introduction to the field, discuss recent results and ongoing challenges, and outline future directions. [1] N. Mosavian, F. Hubert, J. Smits, P. Kehayias, Y. Silani, B. A. Richards, V. M. Acosta, "Super-resolution diamond magnetic microscopy of superparamagnetic nanoparticles. ACS Nano 18, 8, 6523 (2024). [2] J. Smits*, J. Damron*, P. Kehayias, A. F. McDowell, N. Mosavian, N. Ristoff, I. Fescenko. A. Laraoui, A. Jarmola, V. M. Acosta, "Two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy with a microfluidic diamond quantum sensor." Science Advances 5 eaaw7895 (2019). [3] Y. Silani, J. Smits, I. Fescenko, M. W. Malone, A. F. McDowell, A. Jarmola, P. Kehayias, B. A. Richards, N. Mosavian, N. Ristoff, V. M. Acosta, "Nuclear quadrupole resonance spectroscopy with a femtotesla diamond magnetometer." Science Advances 9 : eadh3189 (2023). Bio: Victor Acosta is an Associate Professor in the Dept of Physics and Astronomy and a member of the Center for High Technology Materials at the University of New Mexico. In addition to his research efforts, he also directs the Quantum Undergraduate Research Experience at CHTM (QU-REACH) and the Quantum Photonics and Quantum Technology (QPAQT) graduate research training programs at UNM.

  3. 10

    Emergent quantum materials and technologies: What are they and why should I care?

    A recording of Christian Binek's presentation about the second quantum revolution, and the role Nebraska has to play in the future of quantum science. This talk was given on January 31, 2022, at the University of Nebraska at Kearney's Science Cafe and was hosted by Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Honor Society.

  4. 9

    EQUATE Grant Celebration

    Recording of Zoom celebration announcing the Emergent Quantum Materials and Technologies (EQUATE) project.

  5. 8

    Kamterer Products on Nanotechnology

    Kamterer Products discusses nanotechnology.

  6. 7

    Lincoln Industries on Nanotechnology

    Scott Weishaar, Vice President of Business Development at Lincoln Industries, discusses nanotechnology.

  7. 6

    Dr. Xia Hong on Nanotechnology

    Dr. Xia Hong describes nanotechnology and research.

  8. 5

    Dr. Stephen Morin on Nanotechnology

    Dr. Steve Morin describes nanotechnology and research.

  9. 4

    Dr. Stephen Ducharme on Nanotechnology

    Dr. Steve Ducharme describes nanotechnology and research.

  10. 3

    Dr. Shudipto Dishari on Nanotechnology

    Dr. Shudipto Dishari describes nanotechnology and research.

  11. 2

    Lithography

    Overview of the lithography section of the cleanroom facility.

  12. 1

    Cleanroom entry

    Overview of entering the cleanroom.

  13. 0

    Characterization room

    Overview of the characterization room in the cleanroom facility.

  14. -1

    Deposition

    Overview of the deposition portion of the cleanroom.

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

No topics indexed yet for this podcast.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

The Nebraska Center for Materials and Nanoscience (NCMN) is the nanoscience research center at the University of Nebraska.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Nebraska Center for Materials and Nanoscience have?

Nebraska Center for Materials and Nanoscience currently has 14 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Nebraska Center for Materials and Nanoscience about?

The Nebraska Center for Materials and Nanoscience (NCMN) is the nanoscience research center at the University of Nebraska.

How often does Nebraska Center for Materials and Nanoscience release new episodes?

Nebraska Center for Materials and Nanoscience has 14 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to Nebraska Center for Materials and Nanoscience?

You can listen to Nebraska Center for Materials and Nanoscience on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.
URL copied to clipboard!