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Home NEWS Science News Chemistry

Detecting Quantum Oscillations in the Kondo Insulator YbB12

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
June 23, 2026
in Chemistry
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Detecting Quantum Oscillations in the Kondo Insulator YbB12 — Chemistry
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Magnetic quantum oscillations (MQOs) have long been an invaluable tool for probing the electronic structure of metals and semimetals. Traditionally, these oscillations arise from the reorganization of conduction electrons into quantized energy levels—Landau levels—when a strong magnetic field is applied. The periodic modulation in an observable physical property, such as electrical resistance or magnetization, provides critical insights into the shape of the Fermi surface and the nature of quasiparticles. Yet, the observation of MQOs in insulators has challenged conventional wisdom, as insulators ostensibly lack the mobile charge carriers necessary to sustain such oscillations. This paradox forms the intriguing backdrop of a new study on the topological Kondo insulator ytterbium dodecaboride (YbB₁₂).

In a groundbreaking investigation led by Dr. Ryosuke Kurihara at Tokyo University of Science and conducted in collaboration with researchers from The University of Tokyo and Kobe University, a high-purity single crystal of YbB₁₂ was subjected to intense magnetic fields up to 65 tesla and cooled near absolute zero. Utilizing advanced ultrasound techniques, the team examined the material’s elastic response to magnetic fields, focusing explicitly on the search for magnetoacoustic quantum oscillations (MAQOs) within both its insulating and metallic phases. Their findings, recently published in Physical Review B and distinguished as an Editors’ Suggestion, not only confirm the presence of quantum oscillations but importantly delineate the conditions under which such oscillations manifest.

YbB₁₂, a Kondo insulator, occupies a unique niche among correlated electron systems. At low temperatures, strong electron-electron interactions hybridize localized f-electron states with itinerant conduction electrons, opening an energy gap that spawns an insulating ground state. Despite this, YbB₁₂ exhibits metallic-like behavior in several properties and has a complex, topologically nontrivial electronic band structure. Prior studies detected MQOs in magnetoresistance measurements while the material remained insulating—a result that contravenes the conventional notion that MQOs imply freely moving charge carriers and a well-defined Fermi surface. To resolve this anomaly, Kurihara’s team deployed bulk-sensitive ultrasonic measurements to detect oscillations in the elastic constants, which are sensitive to the coupling between quasiparticles and lattice vibrations.

Their ultrasonic experiments revealed a stark dichotomy between the insulating and metallic phases of YbB₁₂. In magnetic fields below approximately 45 tesla, where YbB₁₂ remains insulating, the researchers found no discernible quantum oscillations in either the longitudinal elastic constant C₁₁ or the shear elastic constant C₄₄. Instead, subtle anomalies such as dips and kinks appeared at intermediate magnetic fields, hinting at complex underlying physics but falling short of definitive oscillatory signals. This absence of MAQOs in the insulating state suggests that quasiparticles, if present, are weakly coupled to acoustic phonons and possess heavy effective masses, factors that dramatically suppress ultrasonic detection of oscillations.

As the applied magnetic field surpassed 45 tesla, YbB₁₂ underwent a field-induced insulator-to-metal transition. In this emergent metallic phase, clear and robust magnetoacoustic quantum oscillations emerged in both monitored elastic modes, signaling a strong interaction between lattice vibrations and itinerant quasiparticles with lower cyclotron masses. This change marks a fundamental shift in the electronic environment and corroborates the hypothesis that MQOs detectable by ultrasound require a sizeable coupling between acoustic phonons and quantum states near the Fermi energy.

The significance of these results extends far beyond YbB₁₂ itself. By clarifying the electronic conditions necessary for MQOs in Kondo insulators, this study provides a pathway to reconcile conflicting observations of quantum oscillations in nominally insulating phases of correlated materials. The differentiation between the insensitivity of ultrasound to heavy quasiparticles in insulators and its pronounced response in metallic states advances our understanding of quasiparticle dynamics, electron-phonon interactions, and the elusive nature of fermionic excitations without traditional charge transport.

Moreover, the methodological framework of employing ultrasonic elasticity measurements to detect magnetoacoustic quantum oscillations sets a precedent for future investigations into complex quantum materials. It opens avenues to non-invasively probe bulk electronic states in systems where traditional transport measurements falter or yield ambiguous data. Such techniques are especially valuable in topological Kondo insulators and heavy-fermion compounds, where subtle electronic transitions underpin exotic phases of matter with potential applications in quantum computing and spintronics.

Dr. Kurihara emphasized the importance of verifying sample dependence and detection sensitivity, noting that previous ultrasound studies had not observed MQOs in YbB₁₂. Using a sample with established magnetoresistance oscillations enabled a definitive test, revealing that the invisibility of oscillations in the insulating state is not an artifact of sample quality but instead an intrinsic characteristic related to the quasiparticle-phonon coupling and effective mass. This nuance offers critical insight for interpreting past conflicting results and progressing toward a unified theoretical framework.

Ultimately, the research uncovers the profound role played by acoustic phonons—quanta of lattice vibrations—in mediating the manifestation of magnetoacoustic quantum oscillations. The coupling strength between fermionic quasiparticles and phonons, modulated by magnetic field-induced electronic phase transitions, emerges as a key determinant of observable oscillatory phenomena in solids. This insight not only deepens the fundamental understanding of many-body physics in strongly correlated electron systems but also lays groundwork for engineering materials where quantum oscillations can be finely controlled or harnessed.

The confluence of high magnetic fields, ultra-low temperatures, and cutting-edge ultrasonic techniques employed in this study exemplifies the frontier of experimental condensed matter physics. As scientists strive to uncover new quantum states and emergent phenomena in correlated materials, elucidating the conditions governing quantum oscillations even in insulating phases will remain a pivotal challenge. The work on YbB₁₂ charts a path forward by linking macroscopic elastic responses to microscopic quasiparticle dynamics, thereby providing a versatile probe into the quantum fabric of matter.

With worldwide research efforts accelerating into quantum materials and their novel functionalities, this research not only deepens comprehension of a fundamental mystery but also accelerates the ongoing quest to unlock next-generation electronic, magnetic, and topological devices. The interplay between magnetoacoustic oscillations, heavy fermions, and topological properties in YbB₁₂ enriches the palette of quantum phenomena accessible to both theorists and experimentalists, foreshadowing discoveries at the nexus of condensed matter physics and materials science.

Subject of Research: Not applicable (detailed study of magnetoacoustic quantum oscillations and phase transitions in YbB₁₂ Kondo insulator).

Article Title: Search for magnetoacoustic quantum oscillations in the insulating phase of YbB12.

News Publication Date: 16-Jun-2026.

References: R. Kurihara et al., Physical Review B (2026), DOI: 10.1103/m3gy-g9tv.

Image Credits: Image adapted from R. Kurihara et al., Physical Review B (2026). © 2026 American Physical Society.

Keywords

Quantum oscillations, Kondo insulator, YbB12, magnetoacoustic quantum oscillations, ultrasound measurements, strong correlations, electron-phonon interaction, heavy fermions, topological materials, magnetic field-induced phase transition, quantum materials, condensed matter physics.

Tags: elastic response to magnetic fieldselectronic structure of Kondo insulatorsFermi surface in topological insulatorshigh magnetic field studies in quantum materialsKondo insulator YbB12Landau quantization in insulatorsmagnetic quantum oscillations in insulatorsmagnetoacoustic quantum oscillationsquantum oscillations in Kondo systemsquantum oscillations near absolute zerotopological properties of ytterbium dodecaborideultrasound techniques in condensed matter physics

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