Elbio Dagotto
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Elbio Rubén Dagotto is an Argentinian-American theoretical physicist and academic. He is a distinguished professor in the department of physics and astronomy at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and Distinguished Scientist in the Materials Science and Technology Division at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Dagotto is most known for using theoretical models and computational techniques to explore transition metal
oxide An oxide () is a chemical compound that contains at least one oxygen atom and one other element in its chemical formula. "Oxide" itself is the dianion of oxygen, an O2– (molecular) ion. with oxygen in the oxidation state of −2. Most of the E ...
s, oxide interfaces, high-temperature superconductors, topological materials, quantum magnets, and nanoscale systems. He authored the book, ''Nanoscale Phase Separation and Colossal Magnetoresistance'' which has focused on transition metal oxides, particularly manganese oxides with the colossal magneto-resistance effect and co-edited the book, ''Multifunctional Oxide Heterostructures''. Dagotto held appointments as a Member of the Solid State Sciences Committee at the
National Academy of Sciences The National Academy of Sciences (NAS) is a United States nonprofit, non-governmental organization. NAS is part of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, along with the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) and the Nati ...
and as a Divisional Editor for '' Physical Review Letters''. He is a Fellow of both the
American Association for the Advancement of Science The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) is an American international non-profit organization with the stated goals of promoting cooperation among scientists, defending scientific freedom, encouraging scientific respons ...
(AAAS) and the
American Physical Society The American Physical Society (APS) is a not-for-profit membership organization of professionals in physics and related disciplines, comprising nearly fifty divisions, sections, and other units. Its mission is the advancement and diffusion of k ...
(APS), and has also been recognized as an Outstanding Referee by the APS and '' Europhysics Letters'' (EPL). Furthermore, he is the recipient of the 2023 David Adler Lectureship Award in the Field of Materials Physics and recipient of the 2023 Alexander Prize of the University of Tennessee.


Education and career

Dagotto studied physics at the Institute Balseiro,
Bariloche Atomic Centre 300px, RA-6 reactor core, pale blue light product of Cherenkov effect The Bariloche Atomic Centre ( es, Centro Atómico Bariloche) is one of the research and development centres of the Argentine National Atomic Energy Commission. As its name ...
,
Bariloche San Carlos de Bariloche, usually known as Bariloche (), is a city in the province of Río Negro Province, Río Negro, Argentina, situated in the foothills of the Andes on the southern shores of Nahuel Huapi Lake. It is located within the Nahuel ...
, Argentina, where he received the title of
Licenciado A licentiate (abbreviated Lic.) is an academic degree present in many countries, representing different educational levels. It may be similar to a master's degree when issued by pontifical universities and other universities in Europe, Latin A ...
. Continuing in the Centro Atomico Bariloche, he received his PhD in the field of High Energy Physics, specifically in lattice gauge theories. He then moved as postdoctoral researcher to the department of physics, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign under the supervision of Eduardo Fradkin and
John Kogut John Benjamin Kogut (6 March 1945 in Brooklyn) is an American theoretical physicist, specializing in high energy physics. Kogut received in 1971 his PhD from Stanford University under James Bjorken with thesis ''Quantum electrodynamics at infinit ...
. His second postdoctoral appointment was at the
Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics The Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics (KITP) is a research institute of the University of California, Santa Barbara. KITP is one of the most renowned institutes for theoretical physics in the world, and brings theorists in physics and rela ...
, at the University of California, Santa Barbara, where he collaborated with
Douglas James Scalapino Douglas James Scalapino (born December 10, 1933 San Francisco, California) is an American physicist noted for his contribution to theoretical condensed matter physics. Career Scalapino completed his undergraduate degree at Yale in 1955, and his ...
, John Robert Schrieffer and Robert Sugar. Dagotto became assistant, associate and then full professor at the department of physics,
Florida State University Florida State University (FSU) is a public research university in Tallahassee, Florida. It is a senior member of the State University System of Florida. Founded in 1851, it is located on the oldest continuous site of higher education in the st ...
. There, he was associated with the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, working in the theory group. He works in a Correlated Electron Group with Adriana Moreo, and has had a joint appointment between the University of Tennessee (UT), Knoxville, and Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) since 2004.


Research

Dagotto's research has primarily focused on strongly correlated electronic materials, and lately in quantum materials, where correlation and topological effects are intertwined. In the presence of strong correlation, the interactions between electrons play a crucial role and the one-electron approximation, used for example in semiconductors, is no longer valid. In this framework, he has worked on theories for many families of materials, such as high critical temperature superconductors and manganese oxides with the colossal magnetoresistance. The overarching theme of his work is that correlated electrons must be considered in the broader context of complexity. As described by
Philip W. Anderson Philip Warren Anderson (December 13, 1923 – March 29, 2020) was an American theoretical physicist and Nobel laureate. Anderson made contributions to the theories of localization, antiferromagnetism, symmetry breaking (including a paper in 1 ...
in his publication, “More Is Different” having simple fundamental interactions among particles does not imply the ability to reconstruct their collective properties. Dagotto argued that in correlated electronic systems, similar
emergence In philosophy, systems theory, science, and art, emergence occurs when an entity is observed to have properties its parts do not have on their own, properties or behaviors that emerge only when the parts interact in a wider whole. Emergence ...
occurs, and these complex systems spontaneously form complicated states and self-organize in patterns impossible to predict by mere inspection of the simple electron-electron interactions involved. Because of its intrinsic difficulty, to study complexity and emergence in quantum materials the use of computational techniques is crucial. He has employed Monte Carlo, density matrix renormalization group, and
Lanczos __NOTOC__ Cornelius (Cornel) Lanczos ( hu, Lánczos Kornél, ; born as Kornél Lőwy, until 1906: ''Löwy (Lőwy) Kornél''; February 2, 1893 – June 25, 1974) was a Hungarian-American and later Hungarian-Irish mathematician and physicist. Acco ...
methods. Together with collaborators, he also developed new algorithms to study systems described by spin-fermion models, with a mixture of quantum and classical degrees of freedom, such as in the double exchange context used for materials in the central part of the ''3d'' row of the periodic table.


Scientific work

In 1992, Dagotto, in collaboration with José Riera and Doug Scalapino, opened the field of ladder compounds, materials with atomic substructures containing two chains next to each other and with inter-ladder coupling (along rungs) of magnitude comparable to that in the long direction (along legs). This research was the first to demonstrate that the transition from one chain to a full two-dimensional plane was not a smooth process simply involving the addition of one chain to another. Instead, it was revealed that even and odd number of chains (called legs due to its ladder-like geometry) belong to classes with quite different behavior. The even-leg ladders, with two legs being the most dramatic case, were theoretically predicted by Dagotto to display a spin gap, spin liquid properties, and tendencies toward superconductivity upon hole doping, all properties confirmed experimentally in materials of the family of copper-based high critical superconductors. Even in the more recently discovered iron-based high critical temperature superconductor, the "123" materials such as BaFe2S3 with ladder geometry also display superconductivity under high pressure. Dagotto employed computational techniques to study model Hamiltonians for high critical temperature superconductors based on copper, thus reducing the uncertainty in the analysis of these models when employing other approximations, such as mean field or variational methods. In 1990, he along with research collaborators, and other groups independently, realized that the dominant attractive channel for Cooper pairs of holes in an antiferromagnetic background is the dx2-y2 channel. In 1990, he studied dynamical properties of the
Hubbard model The Hubbard model is an approximate model used to describe the transition between conducting and insulating systems. It is particularly useful in solid-state physics. The model is named for John Hubbard. The Hubbard model states that each el ...
and
t-J model In solid-state physics, the ''t''-''J'' model is a model first derived in 1977 from the Hubbard model by Józef Spałek to explain antiferromagnetic properties of the Mott insulators and taking into account experimental results about the streng ...
computationally, addressing photoemission dispersions and quasiparticle weights. In 1998, Dagotto developed the Monte Carlo techniques that allowed for the first computational studies of spin-fermion models for manganites, in collaboration with Seiji Yunoki and Adriana Moreo. Employing these techniques, phase separation involving electronic degrees of freedom, dubbed "electronic phase separation" was discovered. The computational techniques developed by him and research collaborators unveiled the strong competition between a ferromagnetic metallic state and complex charge-orbital-spin ordered insulating states, providing the explanation for the colossal magnetoresistance effect in manganites. More recently, similar Monte Carlo techniques have been employed by him and collaborators to study properties of iron-based superconductors, revealing the role of the lattice to stabilize the electronic nematic regime above the antiferromagnetic critical temperature. In a highly cited 2005 publication, Dagotto argued that the electronic degree of freedom in transition metal oxides and related materials displays characteristics similar to those of soft matter, where complex patterns arise from deceptively simple interactions. In 2006, Dagotto and Ivan Sergienko developed a theory to understand the
multiferroic Multiferroics are defined as materials that exhibit more than one of the primary ferroic properties in the same phase: * ferromagnetism – a magnetisation that is switchable by an applied magnetic field * ferroelectricity – an electric polarisa ...
properties of narrow bandwidth perovskites and other oxides. Their spin arrangements break inversion symmetry, and this triggers ferroelectric properties, leading to multiferroics, which are materials with both magnetic and ferroelectric properties. He, along with Ivan Sergienko, Cengiz Sen,
Silvia Picozzi Silvia Picozzi is an Italian physicist who researches density functional theory, ferroelectricity, and antiferromagnetism at the Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche. She is an elected fellow of the American Physical Society. Early life and ed ...
and collaborators also proposed magnetostriction as a mechanism for multiferroicity. Dagotto made several other contributions to theoretical condensed matter physics. Together with
Pengcheng Dai Pengcheng Dai is a Chinese American experimental physicist and academic. He is the Sam and Helen Worden Professor of Physics in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at Rice University. Dai is most known for his research in the field of unconv ...
and Jiangping Hu, in 2012 they were among the first to argue that the iron based high critical temperature superconductors are not located in the weak Hubbard coupling limit. Instead they are in the intermediate Hubbard coupling regime, thus requiring a combination of localized and itinerant degrees of freedom. In particular, iron selenides are an example of materials where electronic correlations and spin frustration cannot be ignored. With Julian Rincon, Jacek Herbrych and collaborators, employing the density matrix renormalization group, they computationally discovered “block” states in low-dimensional multi-orbital Hubbard models. Spin blocks are groups of spin that are aligned ferromagnetically, anti-ferro coupled among them, and they display exotic dynamical spin structure factors with a mixture of spin waves and optical modes. Among the related findings, Herbrych, Dagotto and collaborators revealed the existence of a spin spiral made out of blocks, a state never reported before. When this spiral one-dimensional state is placed over a two-dimensional superconducting plane,
Majorana fermion A Majorana fermion (, uploaded 19 April 2013, retrieved 5 October 2014; and also based on the pronunciation of physicist's name.), also referred to as a Majorana particle, is a fermion that is its own antiparticle. They were hypothesised by Et ...
s developed at the chain by proximity effect from the plane, and for this reason this chain-plane geometry has potential value in
topological quantum computing A topological quantum computer is a theoretical quantum computer proposed by Russian-American physicist Alexei Kitaev in 1997. It employs quasiparticles in two-dimensional systems, called anyons, whose world lines pass around one another to form ...
. He, together with Narayan Mohanta and Satoshi Okamoto, also reported Majoranas in a two-dimensional three-layer geometry with a skyrmion crystal at the bottom, an electron gas in the middle, and a standard superconductor at the top with a carved one-dimensional channel. Within topology in one dimension, he, Nirav Patel, and collaborators proposed a fermionic two-orbital electronic model that becomes the S=1 Haldane chain in strong Hubbard coupling, and has similarities with the AKLT state of spin systems. The proposed fermionic model has a spin gap and spin liquid properties, as the Haldane chain, and it is quite different from the S=1/2 Heisenberg chain. Moreover, he and collaborators predicted superconductivity upon hole doping, similarly as it occurs in ladders due to the existence of preformed spin ½ singlets in the ground state as in a resonant valence bond state. Dagotto also contributed to theoretical aspects of oxide interfaces, where oxides are grown one over the other creating interfaces where reconstructions of the spin, charge, orbital, and lattice can occur. Together with Shuai Dong and collaborators, he showed that a superlattice made of insulating Mn-oxide components becomes globally metallic in the new geometry. He has also worked in skyrmions. In the early stages of his career, he made contributions: to particle physics in the context of lattice gauge theories, to the interface between particle physics and condensed matter, and to frustrated spin systems.


Personal life

Dagotto is married to Adriana Moreo, another physicist with whom he has two children; they met as undergraduates at the Balseiro Institute.


Awards and honors

*1998 – Fellow, American Physical Society *2006 – Member, Solid State Sciences Committee of the National Academy of Sciences *2008 – Outstanding Referee, American Physical Society (APS) *2010 – Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) *2012 – Outstanding Referee, Europhysics Letters (EPL) *2019, 2021, 2023 – Teacher of the year award, University of Tennessee *2023 – David Adler Lectureship Award in the Field of Materials Physics, American Physical Society with citation "For pioneering work on the theoretical framework of correlated electron systems and describing their importance through elegant written and oral communications." *2023 – Alexander Prize, University of Tennessee


Bibliography


Books

*''Nanoscale Phase Separation and Colossal Magnetoresistance'' (2003) ISBN 9783540432456 *''Multifunctional Oxide Heterostructures'' (2012) ISBN 9780199584123


Selected articles

*Dagotto, E., Riera, J., & Scalapino, D. (1992). Superconductivity in ladders and coupled planes. ''Physical Review B'', 45(10), 5744. *Barnes, T., Dagotto, E., Riera, J., & Swanson, E. S. (1993). Excitation spectrum of Heisenberg spin ladders. ''Physical Review B'', 47(6), 3196. *Dagotto, E. (1994). Correlated electrons in high-temperature superconductors. ''Reviews of Modern Physics'', 66(3), 763. *Dagotto, E., & Rice, T. M. (1996). Surprises on the way from one-to two-dimensional quantum magnets: The ladder materials. ''Science'', 271(5249), 618–623. *Yunoki, S., Hu, J., Malvezzi, A. L., Moreo, A., Furukawa, N., & Dagotto, E. (1998). Phase separation in electronic models for manganites. ''Physical Review Letters'', 80(4), 845. *Moreo, A., Yunoki, S., & Dagotto, E. (1999). Phase separation scenario for manganese oxides and related materials. ''Science'', 283(5410), 2034–2040. *Dagotto, E., Hotta, T., & Moreo, A. (2001). Colossal magnetoresistant materials: the key role of phase separation. ''Physics Reports'', 344(1–3), 1–153. *Dagotto, E. (2005). Complexity in strongly correlated electronic systems. ''Science'', 309(5732), 257–262. *Sergienko, I. A., & Dagotto, E. (2006). Role of the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction in multiferroic perovskites. ''Physical Review B'', 73(9), 094434. *Dai, P., Hu, J., & Dagotto, E. (2012). Magnetism and its microscopic origin in iron-based high-temperature superconductors. ''Nature Physics'', 8(10), 709–718.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Dagotto, Elbio University of Tennessee faculty Living people 21st-century American physicists 21st-century American academics Theoretical physicists Year of birth missing (living people) Fellows of the American Physical Society