193 research outputs found
Theory of spin-Hall transport of heavy holes in semiconductor quantum wells
Based on a proper definition of the spin current, we investigate the
spin-Hall effect of heavy holes in narrow quantum wells in the presence of
Rashba spin-orbit coupling by using a spin-density matrix approach. In contrast
to previous results obtained on the basis of the conventional definition of the
spin current, we arrive at the conclusion that an electric-field-induced
steady-state spin-Hall current does not exist in both, pure and disordered
infinite samples. Only an ac field can induce a spin-Hall effect in such
systems.Comment: 6 pages, submitted to J. Phys.: Condens. Matte
Spin-Hall effect and spin-coherent excitations in a strongly confined two-dimensional hole gas
Based on a rigorous quantum-kinetic approach, spin-charge coupled
drift-diffusion equations are derived for a strongly confined two-dimensional
hole gas. An electric field leads to a coupling between the spin and charge
degrees of freedom. For weak spin-orbit interaction, this coupling gives rise
to the intrinsic spin-Hall effect. There exists a threshold value of the
spin-orbit coupling constant that separates spin diffusion from ballistic spin
transport. In the latter regime, undamped spin-coherent oscillations are
observed. This result is confirmed by an exact microscopic approach valid in
the ballistic regime.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
Coupled spin-charge drift-diffusion approach for a two-dimensional electron gas with Rashba spin-orbit coupling
Based on kinetic equations for the density matrix, drift-diffusion equations
are derived for a two-dimensional electron gas with Rashba spin-orbit coupling.
Universal results are obtained for the weak coupling case. Most interesting is
the observation that with increasing spin-orbit coupling strengths there is a
sharp transition between spin diffusion and ballistic spin transport. For
strong spin-orbit coupling, when the elastic scattering time is much larger
than the spin relaxation time, undamped spin-coherent waves are identified. The
existence of these long-lived spin-coherent states is confirmed by exact
analytical results obtained from microscopic kinetic equations valid in the
ballistic regime.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figure
Field-induced spin excitations in Rashba-Dresselhaus two-dimensional electron systems probed by surface acoustic waves
A spin-rotation symmetry in spin-orbit coupled two-dimensional electron
systems gives rise to a long-lived spin excitation that is robust against
short-range impurity scattering. The influence of a constant in-plane electric
field on this persistent spin helix is studied. To probe the field-induced
eigen-modes of the spin-charge coupled system, a surface acoustic wave is
exploited that provides the wave-vector for resonant excitation. The approach
takes advantage of methods worked out in the field of space-charge waves. Sharp
resonances in the field dependence of the in-plane and out-of-plane
magnetization are identified.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figure
Oscillation of spin polarization in a two-dimensional hole gas under a perpendicular magnetic field
Spin-charge coupling is studied for a strongly confined two-dimensional hole
gas subject to a perpendicular magnetic field. The study is based on
spin-charge coupled drift-diffusion equations derived from quantum-kinetic
equations in an exact manner. The spin-orbit interaction induces an extra
out-of-plane spin polarization. This contribution exhibits a persistent
oscillatory pattern in the strong-coupling regime.Comment: 11 pages and 1 figur
A Variational Approach to Nonlocal Exciton-Phonon Coupling
In this paper we apply variational energy band theory to a form of the
Holstein Hamiltonian in which the influence of lattice vibrations (optical
phonons) on both local site energies (local coupling) and transfers of
electronic excitations between neighboring sites (nonlocal coupling) is taken
into account. A flexible spanning set of orthonormal eigenfunctions of the
joint exciton-phonon crystal momentum is used to arrive at a variational
estimate (bound) of the ground state energy for every value of the joint
crystal momentum, yielding a variational estimate of the lowest polaron energy
band across the entire Brillouin zone, as well as the complete set of polaron
Bloch functions associated with this band. The variation is implemented
numerically, avoiding restrictive assumptions that have limited the scope of
previous assaults on the same and similar problems. Polaron energy bands and
the structure of the associated Bloch states are studied at general points in
the three-dimensional parameter space of the model Hamiltonian (electronic
tunneling, local coupling, nonlocal coupling), though our principal emphasis
lay in under-studied area of nonlocal coupling and its interplay with
electronic tunneling; a phase diagram summarizing the latter is presented. The
common notion of a "self-trapping transition" is addressed and generalized.Comment: 33 pages, 11 figure
Localized modes in defective multilayer structures
In this paper, the localized surface modes in a defective multilayer
structure has been investigated. It is shown that the defective multilayer
structures can support two different kind of localized modes depending on the
position and the thickness of the defect layer. One of these modes is localized
at the interface between the multilayer structure and a homogeneous medium (the
so-called surface mode) and the other one is localized at the defect layer
(defect localized mode). We reveal that the presence of defect layer pushes the
dispersion curve of surface modes to the lower or the upper edge of the
photonic bandgap depending on the homogeneous medium is a left-handed or
right-handed medium (e.g. vacuum), respectively. So, the existence region of
the surface modes restricted. Moreover, the effect of defect on the energy flow
velocity of the surface modes is discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figure
On dispersive energy transport and relaxation in the hopping regime
A new method for investigating relaxation phenomena for charge carriers
hopping between localized tail states has been developed. It allows us to
consider both charge and energy {\it dispersive} transport. The method is based
on the idea of quasi-elasticity: the typical energy loss during a hop is much
less than all other characteristic energies. We have investigated two models
with different density of states energy dependencies with our method. In
general, we have found that the motion of a packet in energy space is affected
by two competing tendencies. First, there is a packet broadening, i.e. the
dispersive energy transport. Second, there is a narrowing of the packet, if the
density of states is depleting with decreasing energy. It is the interplay of
these two tendencies that determines the overall evolution. If the density of
states is constant, only broadening exists. In this case a packet in energy
space evolves into Gaussian one, moving with constant drift velocity and mean
square deviation increasing linearly in time. If the density of states depletes
exponentially with decreasing energy, the motion of the packet tremendously
slows down with time. For large times the mean square deviation of the packet
becomes constant, so that the motion of the packet is ``soliton-like''.Comment: 26 pages, RevTeX, 10 EPS figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Ac hopping conduction at extreme disorder takes place on the percolating cluster
Simulations of the random barrier model show that ac currents at extreme
disorder are carried almost entirely by the percolating cluster slightly above
threshold; thus contradicting traditional theories contributions from isolated
low-activation-energy clusters are negligible. The effective medium
approximation in conjunction with the Alexander-Orbach conjecture leads to an
excellent analytical fit to the universal ac conductivity with no nontrivial
fitting parameters
- …