1,270 research outputs found
Ising Quantum Hall Ferromagnet in Magnetically Doped Quantum Wells
We report on the observation of the Ising quantum Hall ferromagnet with Curie
temperature as high as 2 K in a modulation-doped (Cd,Mn)Te
heterostructure. In this system field-induced crossing of Landau levels occurs
due to the giant spin-splitting effect. Magnetoresistance data, collected over
a wide range of temperatures, magnetic fields, tilt angles, and electron
densities, are discussed taking into account both Coulomb electron-electron
interactions and sd coupling to Mn spin fluctuations. The critical behavior
of the resistance ``spikes'' at corroborates theoretical
suggestions that the ferromagnet is destroyed by domain excitations.Comment: revised, 4 pages, 4 figure
Persistent Spin Helix Manipulation by Optical Doping of a CdTe Quantum Well
Time-resolved Kerr-rotation microscopy explores the influence of optical
doping on the persistent spin helix in a [001]-grown CdTe quantum well at
cryogenic temperatures. Electron spin diffusion dynamics reveal a
momentum-dependent effective magnetic field providing SU(2) spin-rotation
symmetry, consistent with kinetic theory. The Dresselhaus and Rashba spin-orbit
coupling parameters are extracted independently from rotating the spin helix
with external magnetic fields applied parallel and perpendicular to the
effective magnetic field. Most importantly, a non-uniform spatiotemporal
precession pattern is observed. The kinetic theory framework of spin diffusion
allows for modeling of this finding by incorporating the photocarrier density
into the Rashba () and the Dresselhaus () parameters.
Corresponding calculations are further validated by an excitation-density
dependent measurement. This work shows universality of the persistent spin
helix by its observation in a II-VI compound and the ability to fine-tune it by
optical doping.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, journal submissio
Fractional quantum Hall effect in CdTe
The fractional quantum Hall (FQH) effect is reported in a high mobility CdTe
quantum well at mK temperatures. Fully-developed FQH states are observed at
filling factor 4/3 and 5/3 and are found to be both spin-polarized ground state
for which the lowest energy excitation is not a spin-flip. This can be
accounted for by the relatively high intrinsic Zeeman energy in this single
valley 2D electron gas. FQH minima are also observed in the first excited (N=1)
Landau level at filling factor 7/3 and 8/3 for intermediate temperatures.Comment: Submitte
Nuclear spin dynamics influenced and detected by electron spin polarization in CdTe/CdMgTe quantum wells
Nuclear spin coherence and relaxation dynamics of all constituent isotopes of
an n-doped CdTe/(Cd,Mg)Te quantum well structure are studied employing
optically detected nuclear magnetic resonance. Using time-resolved pump-probe
Faraday ellipticity, we generate and detect the coherent spin dynamics of the
resident electrons. The photogenerated electron spin polarization is
transferred into the nuclear spin system, which becomes polarized and acts back
on the electron spins as the Overhauser field. Under the influence of resonant
radio frequency pulses, we trace the coherent spin dynamics of the nuclear
isotopes Cd, Cd, and Te. We measure nuclear Rabi
oscillations, the inhomogeneous dephasing time , the spin coherence time
, and the longitudinal relaxation time . Furthermore, we investigate
the influence of the laser excitation and the corresponding electron spin
polarization on the nuclear spin relaxation time and find a weak extension of
this time induced by interaction with the electron spins.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Single spin optical read-out in CdTe/ZnTe quantum dot studied by photon correlation spectroscopy
Spin dynamics of a single electron and an exciton confined in CdTe/ZnTe
quantum dot is investigated by polarization-resolved correlation spectroscopy.
Spin memory effects extending over at least a few tens of nanoseconds have been
directly observed in magnetic field and described quantitatively in terms of a
simple rate equation model. We demonstrate an effective (68%) all-optical
read-out of the single carrier spin state through probing the degree of
circular polarization of exciton emission after capture of an oppositely
charged carrier. The perturbation introduced by the pulsed optical excitation
serving to study the spin dynamics has been found to be the main source of the
polarization loss in the read-out process. In the limit of low laser power the
read-out efficiency extrapolates to a value close to 100%. The measurements
allowed us as well to determine neutral exciton spin relaxation time ranging
from 3.4 +/- 0.1 ns at B = 0 T to 16 +/- 3 ns at B = 5 T.Comment: to appear in Phys. Rev.
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