136 research outputs found

    Optical conductivity of Mn doped GaAs

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    We study the optical conductivity in the III-V diluted magnetic semiconductor GaMnAs and compare our calculations to available experimental data. Our model study is able to reproduce both qualitatively and quantitatively the observed measurements. We show that compensation (low carrier density) leads, in agreement to the observed measurements to a red shift of the broad peak located at approximately 200 meV for the optimally annealed sample. The non perturbative treatment appears to be essential, otherwise a blueshift and an incorrect amplitude would be obtained. By calculating the Drude weight (order parameter) we establish the metal-insulator phase diagram. We indeed find that Mn doped GaAs is close to the metal-insulator transition and that for 5% and 7% doped samples, 20% of the carriers only are delocalized. We have found that the optical mass is approximately 2 me_{e}. We have also interesting results for overdoped samples which could be experimentally realized by Zn codoping.Comment: the manuscript has been extended, new figures are include

    Non-perturbative JpdJ_{pd} model and ferromagnetism in dilute magnets

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    We calculate magnetic couplings in the JpdJ_{pd} model for dilute magnets, in order both to identify the relevant parameters which control ferromagnetism and also to bridge the gap between first principle calculations and model approaches. The magnetic exchange interactions are calculated non-perturbatively and disorder in the configuration of impurities is treated exacly, allowing us to test the validity of effective medium theories. Results differ qualitatively from those of weak coupling. In contrast to mean field theory, increasing JpdJ_{pd} may not favor high Curie temperatures: TCT_C scales primarily with the bandwidth. High temperature ferromagnetism at small dilutions is associated with resonant structure in the p-band. Comparison to diluted magnetic semiconductors indicate that Ga(Mn)As has such a resonant structure and thus this material is already close to optimality.Comment: 4 pages, 4 Figure

    Absence of confinement in (SrTiO3)/(SrTi0:8Nb0:2O3) superlattices

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    The reduction of dimensionality is an efficient pathway to boost the performances of thermoelectric materials, it leads to the quantum confinement of the carriers and thus to large Seebeck coefficients (S) and it also suppresses the thermal conductivity by increasing the phonon scattering processes. However, quantum confinement in superlattices is not always easy to achieve and needs to be carefully validated. In the past decade, large values of S have been measured in (SrTiO3)/(SrTi0:8Nb0:2O3) superlattices (Nat. Mater. 6, 129 (2007) and Appl. Phys. Lett. 91, 192105 (2007)). In the δ\delta-doped compound, the measured S was almost 6 times larger than that of the bulk material. This huge increase has been attributed to the two dimensional confinement of the carriers in the doped regions. In this work, we demonstrate that the experimental data can be well explained quantitatively within the scenario in which electrons are delocalized in both in-plane and growth directions, hence strongly suggesting that the confinement picture in these superlattices may be unlikely.Comment: 5 figures, manuscript submitte

    Unified picture for diluted magnetic semiconductors

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    For already a decade the field of diluted magnetic semiconductors (DMS) is one of the hottest. In spite of the great success of material specific Density Functional Theory (DFT) to provide accurately critical Curie temperatures (TCT_{C}) in various III-V based materials, the ultimate search for a unifying model/theory was still an open issue. Many crucial questions were still without answer, as for example: Why, after one decade, does GaMnAs still exhibit the highest TCT_{C}? Is there any intrinsic limitations or any hope to reach room temperature? How to explain in a unique theory the proximity of GaMnAs to the metal-insulator transition, and the change from RKKY couplings in II-VI materials to the double exchange regime in GaMnN? The aim of the present work is to provide this missing theory. We will show that the key parameter is the position of the Mn level acceptor and that GaMnAs has the highest TCT_{C} among III-V DMS. Our theory (i) provides an overall understanding, (ii) is quantitatively consistent with existing DFT based studies, (iii) able to explain both transport and magnetic properties in a broad variety of DMS and (iv) reproduces the TCT_{C} obtained from first principle studies for many materials including both GaMnN and GaMnAs. The model also reproduces accurately recent experimental data of the optical conductivity of GaMnAs and predicts those of other materials.Comment: 5 figures includes, accepted for publication in Eur. Phys. Let

    Superexchange induced canted ferromagnetism in dilute magnets

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    We argue, in contrast to recent studies, that the antiferromagnetic superexchange coupling between nearest neighbour spins does not fully destroy the ferromagnetism in dilute magnets with long-ranged ferromagnetic couplings. Above a critical coupling, we find a \textit{canted} ferromagnetic phase with unsaturated moment. We have calculated the transition temperature using a simplified local Random Phase Approximation procedure which accounts for the canting. For the dilute magnetic semiconductors, such as GaMnAs, using \textit{ab-initio} couplings allows us to predict the existence of a canted phase and provide an explanation to the apparent contradictions observed in experimental measurements. Finally, we have compared with previous studies that used RKKY couplings and reported non-ferromagnetic state when the superexchange is too strong. Even in this case the ferromagnetism should remain essentially stable in the form of a canted phase.Comment: 6 figures, submitted to Phys. Re

    Magnetic spin excitations in Mn doped GaAs : A model study

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    We provide a quantitative theoretical model study of the dynamical magnetic properties of optimally annealed Ga1−x_{1-x}Mnx_xAs. This model has already been shown to reproduce accurately the Curie temperatures for Ga1−x_{1-x}Mnx_xAs. Here we show that the calculated spin stiffness are in excellent agreement with those which were obtained from ab-initio based studies. In addition, an overall good agreement is also found with available experimental data. We have also evaluated the magnon density of states and the typical density of states from which the "mobility edge", separating the extended from localized magnon states, was determined. The power of the model lies in its ability to be generalized for a broad class of diluted magnetic semiconductor materials, thus it bridges the gap between first principle calculations and model based studies.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, Text and some figures revised to match the accepted versio

    Unified modelling of the thermoelectric properties in SrTiO3

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    Thermoelectric materials are opening a promising pathway to address energy conversion issues governed by a competition between thermal and electronic transport. Improving the efficiency is a difficult task, a challenge that requires new strategies to unearth optimized compounds. We present a theory of thermoelectric transport in electron doped SrTiO3, based on a realistic tight binding model that includes relevant scattering processes. We compare our calculations against a wide panel of experimental data, both bulk and thin films. We find a qualitative and quantitative agreement over both a wide range of temperatures and carrier concentrations, from light to heavily doped. Moreover, the results appear insensitive to the nature of the dopant La, B, Gd and Nb. Thus, the quantitative success found in the case of SrTiO3, reveals an efficient procedure to explore new routes to improve the thermoelectric properties in oxides.Comment: 5 figures, manuscript submitte

    Persistent Currents in Multichannel Interacting Systems

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    Persistent currents of disordered multichannel mesoscopic rings of spinless interacting fermions threaded by a magnetic flux are calculated using exact diagonalizations and self-consistent Hartree-Fock methods. The validity of the Hartree-Fock approximation is controled by a direct comparison with the exact results on small 4×44\times4 clusters. For sufficiently large disorder (diffusive regime), the effect of repulsive interactions on the current distribution is to slightly decrease its width (mean square current) but to {\it increase} its mean value (mean current). This effect is stronger in the case of a long range repulsion. Our results suggest that the coupling between the chains is essential to understand the large currents observed experimentally.Comment: Revised version, uuencoded compressed file including fig

    RKKY Interaction in Disordered Graphene

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    We investigate the effects of nonmagnetic disorder on the Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yoshida (RKKY) interaction in graphene by studying numerically the Anderson model with on-site and hopping disorder on a honeycomb lattice at half filling. We evaluate the strength of the interaction as a function of the distance R between two magnetic ions, as well as their lattice positions and orientations. In the clean limit, we find that the strength of the interaction decays as 1/R^3, with its sign and oscillation amplitude showing strong anisotropy. With increasing on-site disorder, the mean amplitude decreases exponentially at distances exceeding the elastic mean free path. At smaller distances, however, the oscillation amplitude increases strongly and its sign changes on the same sublattice for all directions but the armchair direction. For random hopping disorder, no sign change is observed. No significant changes to the geometrical average values of the RKKY interaction are found at small distances, while exponential suppression is observed at distances exceeding the localization length.Comment: 4+\epsilon\ pages, 5 figure

    Absence of Ferromagnetism in Mn-doped Tetragonal Zirconia

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    In a recent letter, it has been predicted within first principle studies that Mn-doped ZrO2 compounds could be good candidate for spintronics application because expected to exhibit ferromagnetism far beyond room temperature. Our purpose is to address this issue experimentally for Mn-doped tetragonal zirconia. We have prepared polycrystalline samples of Y0.15(Zr0.85-yMny)O2 (y=0, 0.05, 0.10, 0.15 & 0.20) by using standard solid state method at equilibrium. The obtained samples were carefully characterized by using x-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, elemental color mapping, X-ray photoemission spectroscopy and magnetization measurements. From the detailed structural analyses, we have observed that the 5% Mn doped compound crystallized into two symmetries (dominating tetragonal & monoclinic), whereas higher Mn doped compounds are found to be in the tetragonal symmetry only. The spectral splitting of the Mn 3s core-level x-ray photoelectron spectra confirms that Mn ions are in the Mn3+ oxidation state and indicate a local magnetic moment of about 4.5 {\mu}B/Mn. Magnetic measurements showed that compounds up to 10% of Mn doping are paramagnetic with antiferromagnetic interactions. However, higher Mn doped compound exhibits local ferrimagnetic ordering. Thus, no ferromagnetism has been observed for all Mn-doped tetragonal ZrO2 samples.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figure
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