2,010 research outputs found

    Electrical Spin Injection in Multi-Wall carbon NanoTubes with transparent ferromagnetic contacts

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    We report on electrical spin injection measurements on MWNTs . We use a ferromagnetic alloy Pd1−x_{1-x}Nix_{x} with x ≈\approx 0.7 which allows to obtain devices with resistances as low as 5.6 kΩk\Omega at 300 KK. The yield of device resistances below 100 kΩk\Omega, at 300 KK, is around 50%. We measure at 2 KK a hysteretic magneto-resistance due to the magnetization reversal of the ferromagnetic leads. The relative difference between the resistance in the antiparallel (AP) orientation and the parallel (P) orientation is about 2%.Comment: submitted to APL version without figures version with figures available on http://www.unibas.ch/phys-meso

    On the Kondo effect in carbon nanotubes at half halfing

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    In a single state of a quantum dot the Kondo effect arises due to the spin-degeneracy, which is present if the dot is occupied with one electron (N = 1). The eigenstates of a carbon nanotube quantum dot possess an additional orbital degeneracy leading to a four-fold shell pattern. This additional degeneracy increases the possibility for the Kondo effect to appear. We revisit the Kondo problem in metallic carbon nanotubes by linear and non-linear transport measurement in this regime, in which the four-fold pattern is present. We have analyzed the ground state of CNTs, which were grown by chemical vapor deposition, at filling N = 1, N = 2, and N = 3. Of particular interest is the half-filled shell, i.e. N = 2. In this case, the ground state is either a paired electron state or a state for which the singlet and triplet states are effectively degenerate, allowing in the latter case for the appearance of the Kondo effect. We deduce numbers for the effective missmatch d of the levels from perfect degeneracy and the exchange energy J. While d ~ 0.1 - 0.2 (in units of level spacing) is in agreement with previous work, the exchange term is found to be surprisingly small: J < 0.02. In addition we report on the observation of gaps, which in one case is seen at N = 3 and in another is present over an extended sequence of levels.Comment: full paper including figures at: http://www.unibas.ch/phys-meso/Research/Papers/2004/Kondo-4shell-SWNT.pd

    The inter-relation between policy and practice for transitions from hospital to home: An ethnographic case study in England’s National Health Service

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    © 2014 Shaw et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.No abstract available (poster presentation)

    Kondo resonance in a nanotube quantum dot coupled to a normal and a superconducting lead

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    We report on electrical transport measurements through a carbon nanotube quantum dot coupled to a normal and a superconducting lead. The ratio of Kondo temperature and superconducting gap TK/ΔT_{K}/\Delta is identified to govern the transport properties of the system. In the case of TK<ΔT_{K}<\Delta the conductance resonance splits into two resonances at ±Δ\pm \Delta. For the opposite scenario TK>ΔT_{K}>\Delta the conductance resonance persists, however the conductance is not enhanced compared to the normal state due to a relative asymmetry of the lead-dot couplings. Within this limit the data is in agreement with a simple model of a resonant SN-interface.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. submitted to the Proc. Rencontres de Moriond on Quantum Information and Decoherence in Nanosystems 200

    Controlling spin in an electronic interferometer with spin-active interfaces

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    We consider electronic current transport through a ballistic one-dimensional quantum wire connected to two ferromagnetic leads. We study the effects of the spin-dependence of interfacial phase shifts (SDIPS) acquired by electrons upon scattering at the boundaries of the wire. The SDIPS produces a spin splitting of the wire resonant energies which is tunable with the gate voltage and the angle between the ferromagnetic polarizations. This property could be used for manipulating spins. In particular, it leads to a giant magnetoresistance effect with a sign tunable with the gate voltage and the magnetic field applied to the wire.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. to be published in Europhysics Letter

    Shot noise in carbon nanotube based Fabry-Perot interferometers

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    We report on shot noise measurements in carbon nanotube based Fabry-Perot electronic interferometers. As a consequence of quantum interferences, the noise power spectral density oscillates as a function of the voltage applied to the gate electrode. The quantum shot noise theory accounts for the data quantitatively. It allows to confirm the existence of two nearly degenerate orbitals. At resonance, the transmission of the nanotube approaches unity, and the nanotube becomes noiseless, as observed in quantum point contacts. In this weak backscattering regime, the dependence of the noise on the backscattering current is found weaker than expected, pointing either to electron-electron interactions or to weak decoherence

    Conserved spin and orbital phase along carbon nanotubes connected with multiple ferromagnetic contacts

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    We report on spin dependent transport measurements in carbon nanotubes based multi-terminal circuits. We observe a gate-controlled spin signal in non-local voltages and an anomalous conductance spin signal, which reveal that both the spin and the orbital phase can be conserved along carbon nanotubes with multiple ferromagnetic contacts. This paves the way for spintronics devices exploiting both these quantum mechanical degrees of freedom on the same footing.Comment: 8 pages - minor differences with published versio

    Adaptive epidemic dissemination as a finite-horizon optimal stopping problem

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    Wireless ad hoc networks are characterized by their limited capabilities and their routine deployment in unfavorable environments. This creates the strong requirement to regulate energy expenditure. We present a scheme to regulate energy cost through optimized transmission scheduling in a noisy epidemic dissemination environment. Building on the intrinsically cross-layer nature of the adaptive epidemic dissemination process, we strive to deliver an optimized mechanism, where energy cost is regulated without compromising the network infection. Improvement of data freshness and applicability in routing are also investigated. Extensive simulations are used to support our proposal
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