dotlah! dotlah!
  • Cities
  • Technology
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Society
  • Science
  • About
Social Links
  • zedreviews.com
  • citi.io
  • aster.cloud
  • liwaiwai.com
  • guzz.co.uk
  • atinatin.com
0 Likes
0 Followers
0 Subscribers
dotlah!
  • Cities
  • Technology
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Society
  • Science
  • About
  • Science
  • Technology

To Make An Atom-sized Machine, You Need A Quantum Mechanic

  • May 5, 2020
Total
0
Shares
0
0
0

Here’s a new chapter in the story of the miniaturisation of machines: researchers in a laboratory in Singapore have shown that a single atom can function as either an engine or a fridge. Such a device could be engineered into future computers and fuel cells to control energy flows.

“Think about how your computer or laptop has a lot of things inside it that heat up. Today you cool that with a fan that blows air. In nanomachines or quantum computers, small devices that do cooling could be something useful,” says Dario Poletti from the Singapore University of Technology and Design (SUTD).

This work gives new insight into the mechanics of such devices. The work is a collaboration involving researchers at the Centre for Quantum Technologies (CQT) and Department of Physics at the National University of Singapore (NUS), SUTD and at the University of Augsburg in Germany. The results were published in the peer-reviewed journal npj Quantum Information on 1 May.

Engines and refrigerators are both machines described by thermodynamics, a branch of science that tells us how energy moves within a system and how we can extract useful work. A classical engine turns energy into useful work. A refrigerator does work to transfer heat, reducing the local temperature. They are, in some sense, opposites.

People have made small heat engines before using a single atom, a single molecule and defects in diamond. A key difference about this device is that it shows quantumness in its action. “We want to understand how we can build thermodynamic devices with just a few atoms. The physics is not well understood so our work is important to know what is possible,” says Manas Mukherjee, a Principal Investigator at CQT, NUS, who led the experimental work.

The researchers studied the thermodynamics of a single barium atom. They devised a scheme in which lasers move one of the atom’s electrons between two energy levels as part of a cycle, causing some energy to be pushed into the atom’s vibrations. Like a car engine consumes petrol to both move pistons and charge up its battery, the atom uses energy from lasers as fuel to increase its vibrating motion. The atom’s vibrations act like a battery, storing energy that can be extracted later. Rearrange the cycle and the atom acts like a fridge, removing energy from the vibrations.

In either mode of operation, quantum effects show up in correlations between the atom’s electronic states and vibrations. “At this scale, the energy transfer between the engine and the load is a bit fuzzy. It is no longer possible to simply do work on the load, you are bound to transfer some heat,” says Poletti. He worked out the theory with collaborators Jiangbin Gong at NUS Physics and Peter Hänggi in Augsburg. The fuzziness makes the process less efficient, but the experimentalists could still make it work.

Mukherjee and colleagues Noah Van Horne, Dahyun Yum and Tarun Dutta used a barium atom from which an electron (a negative charge) is removed. This makes the atom positively charged, so it can be more easily held still inside a metal chamber by electrical fields. All other air is removed from around it. The atom is then zapped with lasers to move it through a four-stage cycle.

The researchers measured the atom’s vibration after applying 2 to 15 cycles. They repeated a given number of cycles up to 150 times, measuring on average how much vibrational energy was present at the end. They could see the vibrational energy increasing when the atom was zapped with an engine cycle, and decreasing when the zaps followed the fridge cycle.

 Experiments with a single-atom device help researchers understand what quantum effects come into play when machinery shrinks to the atomic scale. (Aki Honda / Centre for Quantum Technologies, National University of Singapore)

Understanding the atom-sized machine involved both complicated calculations and observations. The team needed to track two thermodynamic quantities known as ergotropy, which is the energy that can be converted to useful work, and entropy, which is related to disorder in the system. Both ergotropy and entropy increase as the atom-machine runs. There’s still a simple way of looking at it, says first author and PhD student Van Horne, “Loosely speaking, we’ve designed a little machine that creates entropy as it is filled up with free energy, much like kids when they are given too much sugar.”

 


Reference:

“Single-atom energy-conversion device with a quantum load”

npj Quantum Information, DOI:10.1038/s41534-020-0264-6 (2020)

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41534-020-0264-6

Total
0
Shares
Share
Tweet
Share
Share
Related Topics
  • National University of Singapore
  • NUS
  • Quantum Mechanics
  • Singapore University of Technology and Design
dotlah.com

Previous Article
  • Lah!

OCBC Bank Places All Individual Secured And Unsecured Loans Under Its Singapore Covid-19 Relief Programme With S$4 Billion Approved To Date

  • May 5, 2020
View Post
Next Article
  • Science
  • Society

The Mysterious Disappearance Of The First SARS Virus, And Why We Need A Vaccine For The Current One But Didn’t For The Other

  • May 5, 2020
View Post
You May Also Like
Red Hat OpenShift
View Post
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Technology

Red Hat Further Drives Digital Sovereignty for the AI Era with Red Hat OpenShift on Google Cloud Dedicated

  • Dean Marc
  • April 21, 2026
View Post
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Technology

Here’s how to get the $7 trillion AI hardware buildout right

  • dotlah.com
  • April 18, 2026
totus-technologies-cover
View Post
  • Business
  • Technology
  • World Events

The Transatlantic Tech Rift and Why Data Sovereignty Is the New Industrial Imperative

  • Ackley Wyndam
  • April 16, 2026
View Post
  • Technology

Hon Hai Technology Group (Foxconn) Recognized As Top 100 Global Innovators 2026

  • Dean Marc
  • April 9, 2026
View Post
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Technology

Kioxia Announces New SSD Model Optimized for AI GPU-Initiated Workloads

  • Dean Marc
  • March 17, 2026
View Post
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Technology

U.S. Ski & Snowboard and Google Announce Collaboration to Build an AI-Based Athlete Performance Tool

  • Dean Marc
  • February 8, 2026
View Post
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Technology

IBM to Support Missile Defense Agency SHIELD Contract

  • Dean Marc
  • February 5, 2026
Smartphone hero image
View Post
  • Gears
  • Technology

Zed Approves | Smartphones for Every Budget Range

  • Ackley Wyndam
  • January 29, 2026


Trending
  • 1
    • Cities
    The 4 Plausible Futures Of The World: Greentocracy
    • March 19, 2020
  • 2
    • Cities
    • Climate Change
    Think Globally, Rebuild Locally
    • April 2, 2024
  • 3
    • Lah!
    • Technology
    Asia Tech x Singapore Unveils Exciting Speaker Line-Up That Explores The Intersection Of Technology, Society & The Digital Economy
    • July 7, 2021
  • ufo-albert-antony-HWQXIYbs8PM-unsplash 4
    • People
    One Third of Americans Believe in Aliens
    • June 3, 2021
  • 5
    • People
    • World Events
    5 Lessons We Must Take From The Coronavirus Crisis
    • August 25, 2020
  • 6
    • Technology
    Singtel, AIS And SK Telecom Invest In A New Gaming Joint Venture
    • March 11, 2020
  • 7
    • Economy
    • People
    • World Events
    What Will The World Be Like After Coronavirus? Four Possible Futures
    • April 3, 2020
  • 8
    • Featured
    A Nescafe Minute. An Ally For Getting Through My Day.
    • May 17, 2024
  • CES 2025: Intel Shows Off Its AI Tech 9
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Technology
    CES 2025: Intel Shows Off Its AI Tech
    • January 23, 2025
  • 10
    • Cities
    • Lah!
    ST Engineering Fuels Singapore’s Smart City Wins At IDC Smart City Asia Pacific Awards 2020
    • June 18, 2020
  • 11
    • Science
    Using The ‘Shadow-effect’ To Generate Electricity
    • May 27, 2020
  • 12
    • Lah!
    Singapore’s Greening Journey: 200 Years And Beyond – An Exhibition On Singapore’s Transformation Into One Of The World’s Lushest Cities
    • August 7, 2019
Trending
  • Red Hat OpenShift 1
    Red Hat Further Drives Digital Sovereignty for the AI Era with Red Hat OpenShift on Google Cloud Dedicated
    • April 21, 2026
  • Illustration of data storage 2
    The Splinternet Comes for European Supply Chains Why Fragmentation Is Now a Boardroom Problem
    • April 21, 2026
  • 3
    Here’s how to get the $7 trillion AI hardware buildout right
    • April 18, 2026
  • totus-technologies-cover 4
    The Transatlantic Tech Rift and Why Data Sovereignty Is the New Industrial Imperative
    • April 16, 2026
  • 5
    What will it take to get ships going through the Strait of Hormuz again?
    • April 13, 2026
  • 6
    Hon Hai Technology Group (Foxconn) Recognized As Top 100 Global Innovators 2026
    • April 9, 2026
  • 7
    3 lessons on the energy transition in an age of crisis
    • April 7, 2026
  • 8
    Samsung Unveils Galaxy A57 5G and Galaxy A37 5G, Packing Pro-Level Features at Awesome Price
    • March 25, 2026
  • 9
    The global price tag of war in the Middle East
    • March 24, 2026
  • 10
    Kioxia Announces New SSD Model Optimized for AI GPU-Initiated Workloads
    • March 17, 2026
Social Links
dotlah! dotlah!
  • Cities
  • Technology
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Society
  • Science
  • About
Connecting Dots Across Asia's Tech and Urban Landscape

Input your search keywords and press Enter.