49 research outputs found

    Spin-charge conversion in disordered two-dimensional electron gases lacking inversion symmetry

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    We study the spin-charge conversion mechanisms in a two-dimensional gas of electrons moving in a smooth disorder potential by accounting for both Rashba-type and Mott's skew scattering contributions. We find that quantum interference effects between spin-flip and skew scattering give rise to anisotropic spin precession scattering (ASP), a direct spin-charge conversion mechanism that was discovered in an earlier study of graphene decorated with adatoms [C. Huang \emph{et al.} Phys.~Rev.~B \textbf{94} 085414.~(2016)]. Our findings suggest that, together with other spin-charge conversion mechanisms such as the inverse galvanic effect, ASP is a fairly universal phenomenon that should be present in disordered two-dimensional systems lacking inversion symmetry.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure

    Dynamical theory of superfluidity in one dimension

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    A theory accounting for the dynamical aspects of the superfluid response of one dimensional (1D) quantum fluids is reported. In long 1D systems the onset of superfluidity is related to the dynamical suppression of quantum phase slips at low temperatures. The effect of this suppression as a function of frequency and temperature is discussed within the framework of the relevant correlation function that is accessible experimentally, namely the momentum response function. Application of these results to the understanding of the superfluid properties of helium confined in nanometer-size pores, edge dislocations in solid 4^4He, and ultra-cold atomic gases is also briefly discussed.Comment: 4.4 pages, 2 eps figures, and 1 page of supplementary informatio

    Anomalous Nonlocal Resistance and Spin-charge Conversion Mechanisms in Two-Dimensional Metals

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    We uncover two anomalous features in the nonlocal transport behavior of two-dimensional metallic materials with spin-orbit coupling. Firstly, the nonlocal resistance can have negative values and oscillate with distance, even in the absence of a magnetic field. Secondly, the oscillations of the nonlocal resistance under an applied in-plane magnetic field (Hanle effect) can be asymmetric under field reversal. Both features are produced by direct magnetoelectric coupling, which is possible in materials with broken inversion symmetry but was not included in previous spin diffusion theories of nonlocal transport. These effects can be used to identify the relative contributions of different spin-charge conversion mechanisms. They should be observable in adatom-functionalized graphene, and may provide the reason for discrepancies in recent nonlocal transport experiments on graphene.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, and Supplementary Materials, to appear in Phys. Rev. Let

    Control of Spin Diffusion and Suppression of the Hanle Effect by the Coexistence of Spin and Valley Hall Effects

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    In addition to spin, electrons in many materials possess an additional pseudo-spin degree of freedom known as 'valley'. In materials where the spin and valley degrees of freedom are weakly coupled, they can be both excited and controlled independently. In this work, we study a model describing the interplay of the spin and valley Hall effects in such two-dimensional materials. We demonstrate the emergence of an additional longitudinal neutral current that is both spin and valley polarized. The additional neutral current allows to control the spin density by tuning the magnitude of the valley Hall effect. In addition, the interplay of the two effects can suppress the Hanle effect, that is, the oscillation of the nonlocal resistance of a Hall bar device with in-plane magnetic field. The latter observation provides a possible explanation for the absence of the Hanle effect in a number of recent experiments. Our work opens also the possibility to engineer the conversion between the valley and spin degrees of freedom in two-dimensional materials.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figure

    Magnetic phases in the one-dimensional Kondo chain on a metallic surface

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    We study the low-temperature properties of a one-dimensional spin-1/2 chain of magnetic impurities coupled to a (normal) metal environment by means of anisotropic Kondo exchange. In the case of easy-plane anisotropy, we obtain the phase diagram of this system at T=0. We show that the in-plane Kondo coupling destabilizes the Tomonaga-Luttinger phase of the spin-chain, and leads to two different phases: i) At strong Kondo coupling, the spins in the chain form Kondo singlets and become screened by the metallic environment, and ii) At weak and intermediate Kondo coupling, we find a novel dissipative phase characterized by diffusive gapless spin excitations. The two phases are separated by a quantum critical point of the Wilson-Fisher universality class with dynamical exponent z2z\simeq2.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures. New version contains clarifications about the specific approximations. Accepted for publication in PR

    Thermalization and Quantum Correlations in Exactly Solvable Models

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    The generalized Gibbs ensemble introduced for describing few body correlations in exactly solvable systems following a quantum quench is related to the nonergodic way in which operators sample, in the limit of infinite time after the quench, the quantum correlations present in the initial state. The nonergodicity of the correlations is thus shown \emph{analytically} to imply the equivalence with the generalized Gibbs ensemble for quantum Ising and XX spin chains as well as for the Luttinger model the thermodynamic limit, and for a broad class of initial states and correlation functions of both local and nonlocal operators.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures. Expanded in response to Referee criticis
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