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arxiv: 1907.10090 · v1 · pith:S63WW2ZWnew · submitted 2019-07-20 · ❄️ cond-mat.mes-hall

Inducing Kondo Screening of Vacancy Magnetic Moments in Graphene with Gating and Local Curvature

Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 19:05 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ❄️ cond-mat.mes-hall
keywords grapheneKondo screeningvacancy magnetic momentsquantum phase transitionscanning tunneling microscopylocal curvaturegate voltage tuning
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0 comments X

The pith

Vacancy magnetic moments in graphene undergo a tunable quantum phase transition between screened and unscreened states.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper establishes that magnetic moments at vacancies in graphene can be screened by conduction electrons through Kondo physics or remain unscreened, depending on coupling strength. This produces a quantum phase transition in the pseudogap density of states of graphene, unlike the always-screened behavior in normal metals or always-unscreened behavior in insulators. STM and STS measurements combined with NRG calculations map the transition as a function of local curvature, which sets the coupling, and chemical potential. The transition enables the magnetic moment to be switched on or off by a gate voltage.

Core claim

Using STM, STS and NRG calculations, we identified Kondo-screening by its spectroscopic signature and mapped the quantum phase-transition as a function of coupling strength and chemical potential. We show that the coupling strength can be tuned across this transition by variations in the local curvature and furthermore that the transition makes it possible to turn the magnetic-moment on and off with a gate voltage.

What carries the argument

Kondo screening of vacancy magnetic moments, identified via its spectroscopic signature in STS and mapped onto the predicted quantum phase transition in pseudogap systems using NRG calculations.

If this is right

  • Local curvature can be used to tune the system across the screened-unscreened boundary.
  • A gate voltage can electrostatically switch the vacancy moment between screened and unscreened phases.
  • The Kondo temperature and screening cloud formation depend on both coupling and the pseudogap nature of graphene's density of states.
  • The phase diagram of the pseudogap Kondo problem is experimentally accessible in graphene.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Device geometries that control local strain could provide a route to spatially addressable magnetic moments.
  • The ability to gate the moment suggests possible use in tunable spin filters or Kondo-based sensors.
  • Similar curvature-tuned transitions may appear in other two-dimensional materials with vacancies.

Load-bearing premise

The spectroscopic features observed in STS arise specifically from Kondo screening of vacancy moments rather than from other many-body or defect-related resonances.

What would settle it

A measurement showing that the same STS features persist when local curvature or gate voltage is varied in a way that should cross the transition but without the expected change in screening would falsify the mapping to the quantum phase transition.

read the original abstract

In normal metals, the magnetic-moment of impurity-spins disappears below a characteristic Kondo temperature, TK. This marks the formation of a polarized cloud of conduction band electrons that screen the magnetic moment . In contrast, moments embedded in insulators remain unscreened at all temperatures. This raises the question about the fate of magnetic-moments in intermediate, pseudogap systems, such as graphene. In these systems coupling between the local moment and the conduction band electrons is predicted to drive a quantum phase-transition between a local-moment phase and a Kondo-screened singlet phase as illustrated in Fig. 1A. However, attempts to experimentally confirm these predictions and their intriguing consequences such as the ability to electrostatically tune magnetic-moments, have been elusive. Here we report the observation of Kondo screening and the quantum phase-transition between screened and unscreened phases of vacancy magnetic-moments in graphene. Using scanning-tunneling-microscopy (STM), spectroscopy (STS) and numerical-renormalization-group (NRG) calculations, we identified Kondo-screening by its spectroscopic signature and mapped the quantum phase-transition as a function of coupling strength and chemical potential. We show that the coupling strength can be tuned across this transition by variations in the local curvature and furthermore that the transition makes it possible to turn the magnetic-moment on and off with a gate voltage.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript reports the experimental observation of Kondo screening of vacancy-induced magnetic moments in graphene and the associated quantum phase transition (QPT) between screened and unscreened phases. Using STM/STS, the authors identify zero-bias resonances whose width and gate/curvature dependence are mapped onto NRG calculations; they claim that local curvature tunes the Kondo coupling across the QPT and that gating can switch the moment on and off.

Significance. If the STS-to-Kondo assignment is robust, the result would constitute the first direct experimental confirmation of the pseudogap Kondo QPT in graphene and would demonstrate electrostatic control of a local moment, with clear implications for graphene-based spintronics and quantum-information proposals. The combination of curvature tuning and NRG modeling is a notable strength.

major comments (2)
  1. [Results section describing STS spectra and NRG fitting (paragraph beginning 'Using scanning-tunneling-microscopy')] The central claim rests on the identification of the observed STS zero-bias features as Kondo resonances rather than charging resonances or other defect states. No orthogonal signature (magnetic-field splitting consistent with the expected g-factor, spin-polarized STM, or temperature dependence that uniquely matches the NRG Kondo lineshape) is reported to exclude alternatives. This mapping is load-bearing for the QPT observation and the gate-tunability conclusion.
  2. [Figure panels and associated text showing gate-voltage and curvature series] The phase boundary and extracted TK values are obtained by fitting STS lineshapes to NRG spectra, yet the manuscript does not supply the raw spectra, background-subtraction procedure, or explicit exclusion criteria used to decide which resonances are retained. Without these details the robustness of the curvature- and gate-dependent transition cannot be assessed.
minor comments (2)
  1. Notation for the Kondo temperature and coupling strength should be defined consistently between the main text and the NRG methods paragraph.
  2. Figure 1A caption could more explicitly state the theoretical phase diagram being tested.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the positive assessment of the significance of our results and for the constructive comments on the robustness of the Kondo assignment and data analysis. We respond to each major comment below.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Results section describing STS spectra and NRG fitting (paragraph beginning 'Using scanning-tunneling-microscopy')] The central claim rests on the identification of the observed STS zero-bias features as Kondo resonances rather than charging resonances or other defect states. No orthogonal signature (magnetic-field splitting consistent with the expected g-factor, spin-polarized STM, or temperature dependence that uniquely matches the NRG Kondo lineshape) is reported to exclude alternatives. This mapping is load-bearing for the QPT observation and the gate-tunability conclusion.

    Authors: The referee correctly notes that magnetic-field splitting or a unique temperature dependence is not reported. Our identification relies on the spectroscopic lineshape together with the systematic gate-voltage and curvature dependence, which reproduces the NRG-predicted pseudogap Kondo QPT (including the location of the phase boundary). Alternative assignments such as charging resonances are inconsistent with this tunability, as they lack a quantum phase transition controlled by coupling strength and chemical potential. We will add an expanded discussion of these points and why they exclude charging effects in the revised manuscript. revision: partial

  2. Referee: [Figure panels and associated text showing gate-voltage and curvature series] The phase boundary and extracted TK values are obtained by fitting STS lineshapes to NRG spectra, yet the manuscript does not supply the raw spectra, background-subtraction procedure, or explicit exclusion criteria used to decide which resonances are retained. Without these details the robustness of the curvature- and gate-dependent transition cannot be assessed.

    Authors: We agree that these details are necessary to allow independent assessment of the fitting procedure and resonance selection. The revised manuscript will include the raw STS spectra, a description of the background-subtraction method, and the explicit criteria for retaining resonances in the supplementary information. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: experimental mapping to independent NRG

full rationale

The paper presents STM/STS experimental spectra from graphene vacancies and compares them to standard NRG calculations for the pseudogap Kondo model. No derivation chain reduces a claimed prediction or first-principles result to its own inputs by construction; the NRG solver is an external, parameter-free numerical method whose outputs are not redefined from the present data. No self-citations are load-bearing for the central identification, and no equations equate fitted parameters to reported transitions. The work is self-contained against external benchmarks (measured spectra vs. computed Kondo signatures), yielding a normal non-finding.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The claim rests on the standard assumption that STS measures the local density of states and on the validity of NRG for the Anderson impurity model in a linear dispersion; no free parameters or invented entities are introduced in the abstract.

axioms (2)
  • domain assumption Scanning tunneling spectroscopy measures the local electronic density of states of the sample.
    Invoked when mapping observed resonances to Kondo screening (abstract).
  • domain assumption Numerical renormalization group accurately solves the Kondo problem for the parameters relevant to graphene vacancies.
    Used to identify the phase boundary (abstract).

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5814 in / 1346 out tokens · 16857 ms · 2026-05-24T19:05:57.199336+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

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