|
By KEVIN FRYLING Reporter Staff Writer
There's a good explanation for the eight-foot pit in the center of
the lab in Fronczak Hall, UB physicist Sambandamurthy Ganapathy tells a
visitor from the Reporter.
 |  A dilution refrigerator is being
installed in Sambandamurthy Ganapathys lab in Fronczak Hall that
will generate temperatures near absolute zero and extremely powerful
magnetic fields in order to create quantum mechanical phenomena for
research purposes. PHOTO: NANCY J. PARISI
|
Slated for installation beneath the floor this summer is a huge,
high-tech piece of equipment known as a dilution refrigerator, which,
he says, will generate temperatures near absolute zero and magnetic
fields 300,000 times more powerful than the Earth's magnetosphere in
order to create quantum mechanical phenomena for scientific
observation. "We're setting up a new lab to study quantum effects
in nanostructures," says Ganapathy, who joined the Department of
Physics, College of Arts and Sciences, as an assistant professor this
past fall. "Our main experiments will be studying electron transport in
nanostructures at very low temperatures and at high magnetic fields...to
understand how electrons go from one place to another in one-dimensional
and zero-dimensional materials." There is no lack of knowledge
about the behavior of electrons in three-dimensional objects, such as
the familiar copper wires through which electrons travel with little
resistance; but Ganapathy says scientists possess scant information
about the behavior of electrons in lower-dimensional objects. These
include one-dimensional objects, such as carbon nanotubes, and
zero-dimensional objects, such as quantum dots. "In quantum
mechanical behavior, electrons don't travel smoothly," Ganapathy notes.
"They jump from one place to another because the energy levels are
quantized." Extremely low temperatures and powerful magnetic
fields encourage this "quantum transport" to take place in
nanomaterials, he says. Electron transport in nanomaterials is
important because nanostructures often are looked upon as the future of
silicon-based consumer electronics, which, he explains, are expected to
saturate in the next 10 to 20 years. "At this stage, it's not clear what
will be the replacement for silicon in the long run," says Ganapathy.
"Several groups in the world are at work on new electronic nanomaterials
that could replace silicon technology in consumer electronics."
Although these potential devices are far from the marketplace,
Ganapathy says scientists whose work provides a basic grasp of the
unique properties of nanomaterials are at the forefront of a process
that will enable engineers to create the next generation of consumer
electronic devices. "Our efforts are to find out how good these
materials are for electronic devices," he says. "Research in this field
is cutting-edge and has large potential for industrial collaborations."
Ganapathy's interest in physics traces back to his time as an
undergraduate at St. John's College in Tirunelveli, India. He went on to
receive a master's degree from the American College in Madurai, India,
in 1994, and a doctorate from the Indian Institute of Science in
Bangalore in 2000, "Physics deals with the laws of nature," he
says. "I wanted to know more about how things work in the world...force
and momentum and acceleration are concepts that have direct relevance to
what you do every day." He adds that he pursued postgraduate education
out of a desire to understand electronic behavior at the atomic
level. In 2001, Ganapathy received a three-year postdoctoral
fellowship to the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israelone of the top
scientific research facilities in the worldand then in 2004, traveled
to the United States to work with Nobel Prize winner Daniel C.
Tsui and with Lloyd Engel in a joint-appointed fellowship to
Princeton University and the National High-Magnetic Field Laboratory
(NHMFL) in Tallahassee, Fla. "At Weizmann, I worked on
superconducting materials, and at Princeton and NHMFL I worked on
semiconductor nanostructures," he says, pointing out that these
experiences brought about valuable insights into the physics of
nanostructures, as well as nanofabrication and dilution refrigeration
techniques. Ganapathy's work has resulted in the publication of more
than 20 articles in leading physics journals. Last year, a paper
co-written by Ganapathy, Tsui and colleagues at Princeton and NHMFL,
which was published in the journal Nature Physics, provided an important
contribution to modern research into the melting behavior of crystalline
electron solids and electron-electron interaction. Two others papers are
in the manuscript stage. The strong growth of the UB physics
department in response to the identification of integrated
nanostructured systems as a strategic strength under the UB 2020
strategic planning process was an important factor in his decision to
come to UB last fall, says Ganapathy. "There are several
departments that participate in this integrated nanostructures project,
such as Chemistry, Electrical Engineering and Physics, to name a few,"
he notes, "so this gives me an opportunity to collaborate with
colleagues in other departments and develop truly interdisciplinary
research projects." Ganapathy says his activities this academic
year have focused on preparing his lab, including working with graduate
students on equipment design and computer programs to control
instruments that must detect the smallest possible electrical signals.
He says the lab will receive three large, custom-built pieces of
equipment in the coming months. The nanodevices used in his experiments
will come from UB's nanofabrication facilities in Bonner Hall. "I
teach classes, too," says Ganapathy. "I taught an introductory freshman
physics course last semesterit was a lot of fun because this is the
first time I'm teaching a freshman-level courseand this semester I'm
teaching a modern physics course for junior physics majors." A
resident of Amherst, Ganapathy moved to the Buffalo area with his wife,
Kalyani, and 2-year-old daughter, Amrita. A native of a tropical region
in India, Ganapathy says his biggest adjustment to Western New York has
been the weather. Low temperatures aren't enough to keep him and
his family from exploring the region, however. "It's pretty
exciting; there are a lot of things you can access nearby," he says,
pointing to destinations such as the Adirondack and Smoky mountains.
"Several people in India want to visit us because we're so close to
Niagara Falls."
|