659 research outputs found

    Controlling Decoherence of Transported Quantum Spin Information in Semiconductor Spintronics

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    We investigate quantum coherence of electron spin transported through a semiconductor spintronic device, where spins are envisaged to be controlled by electrical means via spin-orbit interactions. To quantify the degree of spin coherence, which can be diminished by an intrinsic mechanism where spin and orbital degrees of freedom become entangled in the course of transport involving spin-orbit interaction and scattering, we study the decay of the off-diagonal elements of the spin density matrix extracted directly from the Landauer transmission matrix of quantum transport. This technique is applied to understand how to preserve quantum interference effects of fragile superpositions of spin states in ballistic and non-ballistic multichannel semiconductor spintronic devices.Comment: 7 pages, 3 color EPS figures, prepared for Proceedings of International Symposium on Mesoscopic Superconductivity and Spintronics 2004 (Atsugi, Japan, March 1-4, 2004

    Structure of quantum disordered wave functions: weak localization, far tails, and mesoscopic transport

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    We report on the comprehensive numerical study of the fluctuation and correlation properties of wave functions in three-dimensional mesoscopic diffusive conductors. Several large sets of nanoscale samples with finite metallic conductance, modeled by an Anderson model with different strengths of diagonal box disorder, have been generated in order to investigate both small and large deviations (as well as the connection between them) of the distribution function of eigenstate amplitudes from the universal prediction of random matrix theory. We find that small, weak localization-type, deviations contain both diffusive contributions (determined by the bulk and boundary conditions dependent terms) and ballistic ones which are generated by electron dynamics below the length scale set by the mean free path ell. By relating the extracted parameters of the functional form of nonperturbative deviations (``far tails'') to the exactly calculated transport properties of mesoscopic conductors, we compare our findings based on the full solution of the Schrodinger equation to different approximative analytical treatments. We find that statistics in the far tail can be explained by the exp-log-cube asymptotics (convincingly refuting the log-normal alternative), but with parameters whose dependence on ell is linear and, therefore, expected to be dominated by ballistic effects. It is demonstrated that both small deviations and far tails depend explicitly on the sample size--the remaining puzzle then is the evolution of the far tail parameters with the size of the conductor since short-scale physics is supposedly insensitive to the sample boundaries.Comment: 13 pages, 9 embedded EPS figures, expanded discussion (with extra one figure) on small size effec
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