Mentor: Veronica Stewart
Mentor's Responsibility for PARADIM: John's Hopkins Graduate Student, McQueen Lab
REU intern: Bryce Coyne
Veronica Stewart is a fourth-year PhD student in Chemistry at Johns Hopkins University, working with Professor Tyrel McQueen. Veronica’s research focuses on the synthesis and characterization of potential axion insulator materials. She previously attended Reed College, where she worked on sol-gel materials for lithium ion battery cathodes.
Project Title:
Screening of MnBi2Te4 as an axion insulator through electronic structure calculations
Project Description:
The proposed project will utilize Quantum Espresso to make band gap calculations of MnBi2Te4to explore its potential as an axion insulator. Band gap calculations will rely on density functional theory (DFT). Literature exists on MnBi2Te4that has characterized the material’s ground state as an anti-ferromagnetic topological insulator state that hosts a quantized magnetoelectric effect. This project will take a computational approach to characterize MnBi2Te4, and explore the effects of modified layer stacking and atomic substitution on its electronic structure. The project’s computational nature allows it to fit in the virtual format by utilizing remote work and collaboration on Quantum Espresso calculations with MARCC.
Research question that defines the REU student's project:
How do stacking modifications of layered axion insulator candidates affect their computed electronic structure?
Project plan/research task to answer the research question:
Become familiar with the use of Quantum Espresso and the literature on axion insulators. Using the MARCC computing center at JHU, calculate the band structure of MnBi2Te4, and of variants with modified van der Waals layer stacking. Identify less-studied homologous materials, and compute the band structures of these materials and their stacking variants.
List of tasks to be performed by the REU student and tasks to be performed by the mentor to answer the research questions:
The tasks above will primarily be performed by the REU student, with the mentor assisting as needed with calculations and literature searches.