130,766 research outputs found
Magnetic Proximity Effect and Interlayer Exchange Coupling of Ferromagnetic/Topological Insulator/Ferromagnetic Trilayer
Magnetic proximity effect between topological insulator (TI) and
ferromagnetic insulator (FMI) is considered to have great potential in
spintronics. However, a complete determination of interfacial magnetic
structure has been highly challenging. We theoretically investigate the
interlayer exchange coupling of two FMIs separated by a TI thin film, and show
that the particular electronic states of the TI contributing to the proximity
effect can be directly identified through the coupling behavior between two
FMIs, together with a tunability of coupling constant. Such FMI/TI/FMI
structure not only serves as a platform to clarify the magnetic structure of
FMI/TI interface, but also provides insights into designing the magnetic
storage devices with ultrafast response.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
M\"obius molecules and fragile Mott insulators
Motivated by the concept of M\"obius aromatics in organic chemistry, we
extend the recently introduced concept of fragile Mott insulators (FMI) to
ring-shaped molecules with repulsive Hubbard interactions threaded by a
half-quantum of magnetic flux (). In this context, a FMI is the
insulating ground state of a finite-size molecule that cannot be adiabatically
connected to a single Slater determinant, i.e., to a band insulator, provided
that time-reversal and lattice translation symmetries are preserved. Based on
exact numerical diagonalization for finite Hubbard interaction strength and
existing Bethe-ansatz studies of the one-dimensional Hubbard model in the
large- limit, we establish a duality between Hubbard molecules with and
sites, with integer. A molecule with sites is an FMI in the
absence of flux but becomes a band insulator in the presence of a half-quantum
of flux, while a molecule with sites is a band insulator in the absence
of flux but becomes an FMI in the presence of a half-quantum of flux. Including
next-nearest-neighbor-hoppings gives rise to new FMI states that belong to
multidimensional irreducible representations of the molecular point group,
giving rise to a rich phase diagram
Validation of transfer functions predicting Cd and Pb free metal ion activity in soil solution as a function of soil characteristics and reactive metal content.
According to recent insight, the toxicity of metals in soils is better related to the free metal ion (FMI) activity in the soil solution than to the total metal
concentration in soil. However, the determination of FMI activities in soil solution is a difficult and time-consuming task. An alternative is to use empirical equations (so called transfer functions (TFs)) that relate FMI activity in solution to the reactive metal concentration in the solid phase and to soil properties (pH and organic matter content). Here we test the applicability of two sets of TF for Cd and Pb using independent data from a wide range of soil types and regions that are not represented in the datasets used to derive the TFs. From these soils, soil solution was extracted using four different methods. For all these extracts, FMI activities were calculated from total concentrations in solution using the speciation program WHAM VI. In some of the soils, Cd and Pb FMI activities
were also measured using a Donnan membrane technique. Most of these FMI activities deviated from the TF predictions by less than one order of magnitude and were within the 95% confidence interval of the TFs, irrespective of the
method used to extract soil solution. Predictability was higher for Pb than for Cd and differed also between the two TF sets
Effect of spin relaxations on the spin mixing conductances for a bilayer structure
The spin current can result in a spin-transfer torque in the
normal-metal(NM)|ferromagnetic-insulator(FMI) or
normal-metal(NM)|ferromagnetic-metal(FMM) bilayer. In the earlier study on this
issue, the spin relaxations were ignored or introduced phenomenologically. In
this paper, considering the FMM or FMI with spin relaxations described by a
non-Hermitian Hamiltonian, we derive an effective spin-transfer torque and an
effective spin mixing conductance in the non-Hermitian bilayer. The dependence
of the effective spin mixing conductance on the system parameters (such as
insulating gap, \textit{s-d} coupling, and layer thickness) as well as the
relations between the real part and the imaginary part of the effective spin
mixing conductance are given and discussed. We find that the effective spin
mixing conductance can be enhanced in the non-Hermitian system. This provides
us with the possibility to enhance the spin mixing conductance
Relationship between macroscopic physical properties and local distortions of low doping La{1-x}Ca{x}MnO3: an EXAFS study
A temperature-dependent EXAFS investigation of La{1-x}Ca{x}MnO3 is presented
for the concentration range that spans the ferromagnetic-insulator (FMI) to
ferromagnetic-metal (FMM) transition region, x = 0.16-0.22. The samples are
insulating for x = 0.16-0.2 and show a metal/insulator transition for x = 0.22.
All samples are ferromagnetic although the saturation magnetization for the 16%
Ca sample is only ~ 70% of the expected value at 0.4T. We find that the FMI
samples have similar correlations between changes in the local Mn-O distortions
and the magnetization as observed previously for the colossal magnetoresistance
(CMR) samples (0.2 < x < 0.5) - except that the FMI samples never become fully
magnetized. The data show that there are at least two distinct types of
distortions. The initial distortions removed as the insulating sample becomes
magnetized are small and provides direct evidence that roughly 50% of the Mn
sites have a small distortion/site and are magnetized first. The large
remaining Mn-O distortions at low T are attributed to a small fraction of
Jahn-Teller-distorted Mn sites that are either antiferromagnetically ordered or
unmagnetized. Thus the insulating samples are very similar to the behavior of
the CMR samples up to the point at which the M/I transition occurs for the CMR
materials. The lack of metallic conductivity for x <= 0.2, when 50% or more of
the sample is magnetic, implies that there must be preferred magnetized Mn
sites and that such sites do not percolate at these concentrations.Comment: 27 pages, 8 figures, to be submitted to Phys. Rev.
Electrostatically Controlled Magnetization Rotation in Ferromagnet-Topological Insulator Planar Structures
An approach to the electrostatic control of magnetization
rotation in the hybrid structures composed of topological insulators (TIs) and
adjacent ferromagnetic insulators (FMI) is proposed and studied. The concept is
based on TI electron energy variation with in-plane to put-of plane FMI
magnetization turn. The calculations explicitly expose the effect of free
energy variability in the form of the electrically controlled uniaxial magnetic
anisotropy, which depends on proximate exchange interaction and TI surface
electron density. Combining with inherent anisotropy, the magnetization
rotation from in-plane to out-of-plane direction is shown to be realizable for
1.7~2.7 ns under the electrical variation of TI chemical potential in the range
100 meV around Dirac point. When bias is withdrawn a small signal current
can target the out-of-plane magnetization instable state to the desirable
direction of in-plane easy axis, thus the structure can lay the foundation for
low energy nonvolatile memory prototype
A Comparative Analysis of Phytovolume Estimation Methods Based on UAV-Photogrammetry and Multispectral Imagery in a Mediterranean Forest
Management and control operations are crucial for preventing forest fires, especially in Mediterranean forest areas with dry climatic periods. One of them is prescribed fires, in which the biomass fuel present in the controlled plot area must be accurately estimated. The most used methods for estimating biomass are time-consuming and demand too much manpower. Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) carrying multispectral sensors can be used to carry out accurate indirect measurements of terrain and vegetation morphology and their radiometric characteristics. Based on the UAV-photogrammetric project products, four estimators of phytovolume were compared in a Mediterranean forest area, all obtained using the difference between a digital surface model (DSM) and a digital terrain model (DTM). The DSM was derived from a UAV-photogrammetric project based on the structure from a motion algorithm. Four different methods for obtaining a DTM were used based on an unclassified dense point cloud produced through a UAV-photogrammetric project (FFU), an unsupervised classified dense point cloud (FFC), a multispectral vegetation index (FMI), and a cloth simulation filter (FCS). Qualitative and quantitative comparisons determined the ability of the phytovolume estimators for vegetation detection and occupied volume. The results show that there are no significant differences in surface vegetation detection between all the pairwise possible comparisons of the four estimators at a 95% confidence level, but FMI presented the best kappa value (0.678) in an error matrix analysis with reference data obtained from photointerpretation and supervised classification. Concerning the accuracy of phytovolume estimation, only FFU and FFC presented differences higher than two standard deviations in a pairwise comparison, and FMI presented the best RMSE (12.3 m) when the estimators were compared to 768 observed data points grouped in four 500 m2 sample plots. The FMI was the best phytovolume estimator of the four compared for low vegetation height in a Mediterranean forest. The use of FMI based on UAV data provides accurate phytovolume estimations that can be applied on several environment management activities, including wildfire prevention. Multitemporal phytovolume estimations based on FMI could help to model the forest resources evolution in a very realistic way
Association between body size and blood pressure in children from different ethnic origins
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Objective</p> <p>To assess associations between body size and blood pressure in children (5-6 years) from different ethnic origins.</p> <p>Method</p> <p>Five ethnic groups of the ABCD cohort were examined: Dutch (n=1 923), Turkish (n=99), Moroccan (n=187), Black-African (n=67) and Black-Caribbean (n=121). Data on body-mass-index (BMI), waist-to-height ratio (WHtR), fat-mass-index (FMI), and systolic blood pressure (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP), were collected. Linear regression analysis with restricted cubic splines was used to examine non-linear associations between body size and blood pressure, adjusted for age, sex, height and birth weight.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Ethnic differences were found in associations of BMI with SBP and DBP (SBP: p=0.001 and DBP: p=0.01) and FMI with SBP (p=0.03). BMI and FMI had a relatively large positive association with SBP in Turkish children (BMI: β=2.46mmHg; 95%CI:1.20-3.72; FMI: β=2.41mmHg; 95%CI:1.09-3.73) compared to Dutch (BMI: β=1.31mmHg; 95%CI:0.71-1.92; FMI: β=0.84mmHg; 95%CI:0.23-1.45). Black-Caribbean and Moroccan children showed high blood pressure with low BMI and FMI. Moroccan children showed higher SBP with high BMI and FMI. WHtR was positively associated with SBP and DBP, similar in all ethnic groups. Generally, strongest associations with blood pressure were found for BMI in all ethnic groups.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Ethnic-specific associations between BMI, and FMI and blood pressure are present at young age, with Turkish children showing the highest increase in blood pressure with increasing body size. The higher blood pressure in the Black-Caribbean and Moroccan children with low BMI needs further research. WHtR or FMI do not seem to be associated more strongly to blood pressure than BMI in any ethnic group.</p
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