ESR-STM on single molecules and molecule-based structures
- Engineering quantum states of molecules on surfaces -
Scaling down information devices to the atomic scale has brought the interest of using individual spins as a
basic unit for data storage. This requires precise detection and control of spin states and a better
understanding of spin-spin interactions.
For the first time ever, scientists at the IBS Center for Quantum Nanoscience at Ewha Womans University (QNS)
have imaged the spin of an individual molecule using electron spin resonance in a scanning tunneling microscope.
This achievement, published this month in Nature Chemistry, harnessed the power of synthetic chemistry to
control the electron spin of a molecule.
A scanning tunneling microscope (STM) has the ability to see exact atomic structures, atom by atom, at a level
that is not possible with other techniques. This study uses an electric microwave applied to the STM tip to
drive electron spin resonance (ESR) on single molecules and investigate the magnetic interaction between two
molecules using this technique.
“Employing single molecules in atomic-scale quantum-control studies is always of high interest and importance.
This work sheds light on some intriguing magnetic interactions between non-localized spins, which is crucial for
developing molecule-based spintronic devices,” says the paper’s first author, Dr. Xue Zhang.
Fe, Ti atoms, and FePc molecules were co-deposited on the surface of a thin magnesium oxide film grown on a
silver substrate. They were then imaged and probed using an STM equipped with ESR capabilities. This work has
extended the ESR experimental platform from single atoms to a much broader class of matter – magnetic molecules,
which brings many more possibilities to perform quantum control on single magnetic molecules.
Electron spin resonance is widely employed in biology and chemistry to determine the structure of unknown
molecules and to measure the dynamic properties of spins in these molecules. ESR is a cousin of magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) that most people are familiar with from hospital visits. ESR is also an essential tool
in the emerging research field of quantum-coherent nanoscience, where the quantum properties of spins are
utilized for quantum computation and quantum information science.
“It is impressive to see that the intermolecular interaction can be investigated with an energy resolution in the
nano-electron volt precision. Certainly, we should explore more unknowns with this fantastic ESR-STM technique,”
says Yu Wang of QNS.

Figure
1.
STM image of iron phthalocyanine (FePc) molecules, iron (Fe) atoms, and titanium (Ti) atoms
co-deposited on 2 monolayers of magnesium oxide (MgO) surface atop a silver substrate. Well-isolated FePc
molecules and naturally formed FePc dimers are abundant.
Notes for editors
- References
Xue Zhang, Christoph Wolf, Yu Wang, Hervé Aubin,
Tobias Bilgeri, Philip Willke, Andreas J. Heinrich, and Taeyoung Choi, Electron Spin Resonance of Single
Molecules and Magnetic Interaction through Ligands, Nature Chemistry (2021) / DOI:
10.1038/s41557-021-00827-7
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- About the Institute for Basic Science (IBS)
IBS was founded
in 2011 by the government of the Republic of Korea with the sole purpose of driving forward the development
of basic science in South Korea. IBS has 30 research centers as of August 2021. There are ten physics, three
mathematics, six chemistry, five life science, one Earth science, and five interdisciplinary research
centers.
- About the Center for Quantum Nanoscience (QNS)
The Center for
Quantum Nanoscience, on the campus of Ewha Woman's University in Seoul, South Korea, is a world-leading
research center merging quantum and nanoscience to engineer the quantum future through basic research.
Backed by Korea’s Institute for Basic Science, the Center for Quantum Nanoscience draws on decades of QNS
Director Andreas J. Heinrich’s (A Boy and His Atom, IBM, 2013) scientific leadership to lay the foundation
for future technology by exploring the use of quantum behavior atom-by-atom on surfaces with the highest
precision.