90 research outputs found
Quantum Size Effect transition in percolating nanocomposite films
We report on unique electronic properties in Fe-SiO2 nanocomposite thin films
in the vicinity of the percolation threshold. The electronic transport is
dominated by quantum corrections to the metallic conduction of the Infinite
Cluster (IC). At low temperature, mesoscopic effects revealed on the
conductivity, Hall effect experiments and low frequency electrical noise
(random telegraph noise and 1/f noise) strongly support the existence of a
temperature-induced Quantum Size Effect (QSE) transition in the metallic
conduction path. Below a critical temperature related to the geometrical
constriction sizes of the IC, the electronic conductivity is mainly governed by
active tunnel conductance across barriers in the metallic network. The high 1/f
noise level and the random telegraph noise are consistently explained by random
potential modulation of the barriers transmittance due to local Coulomb
charges. Our results provide evidence that a lowering of the temperature is
somehow equivalent to a decrease of the metal fraction in the vicinity of the
percolation limit.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figure
Structural and transport properties of GaAs/delta<Mn>/GaAs/InxGa1-xAs/GaAs quantum wells
We report results of investigations of structural and transport properties of
GaAs/Ga(1-x)In(x)As/GaAs quantum wells (QWs) having a 0.5-1.8 ML thick Mn
layer, separated from the QW by a 3 nm thick spacer. The structure has hole
mobility of about 2000 cm2/(V*s) being by several orders of magnitude higher
than in known ferromagnetic two-dimensional structures. The analysis of the
electro-physical properties of these systems is based on detailed study of
their structure by means of high-resolution X-ray diffractometry and
glancing-incidence reflection, which allow us to restore the depth profiles of
structural characteristics of the QWs and thin Mn containing layers. These
investigations show absence of Mn atoms inside the QWs. The quality of the
structures was also characterized by photoluminescence spectra from the QWs.
Transport properties reveal features inherent to ferromagnetic systems: a
specific maximum in the temperature dependence of the resistance and the
anomalous Hall effect (AHE) observed in samples with both "metallic" and
activated types of conductivity up to ~100 K. AHE is most pronounced in the
temperature range where the resistance maximum is observed, and decreases with
decreasing temperature. The results are discussed in terms of interaction of
2D-holes and magnetic Mn ions in presence of large-scale potential fluctuations
related to random distribution of Mn atoms. The AHE values are compared with
calculations taking into account its "intrinsic" mechanism in ferromagnetic
systems.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure
Noise studies of magnetization dynamics in dilute magnetic semiconductor heterostructures
We study theoretically and experimentally the frequency and temperature
dependence of resistivity noise in semiconductor heterostructures delta-doped
by Mn. The resistivity noise is observed to be non-monotonous as a function of
frequency. As a function of temperature, the noise increases by two orders of
magnitude for a resistivity increase of about 50%. We study two possible
sources of resistivity noise -- dynamic spin fluctuations and charge
fluctuations, and find that dynamic spin fluctuations are more relevant for the
observed noise data. The frequency and temperature dependence of resistivity
noise provide important information on the nature of the magnetic interactions.
In particular, we show how noise measurements can help resolve a long standing
debate on whether the Mn-doped GaAs is an p-d Zener/RKKY or double exchange
ferromagnet. Our analysis includes the effect of different kinds of disorder
such as spin-glass type of interactions and a site-dilution type of disorder.
We find that the resistivity noise in these structures is well described by a
disordered RKKY ferromagnet model dynamics with a conserved order parameter.Comment: 15 pages, 7 eps figures, published versio
Co-occurrence of Superparamagnetism and Anomalous Hall Effect in Highly Reduced Cobalt Doped Rutile TiO2 Films
We report a detailed magnetic and structural analysis of highly reduced Co
doped rutile TiO2 films displaying an anomalous Hall effect (AHE). The
temperature and field dependence of magnetization, and transmission electron
microscopy clearly establish the presence of nano-sized superparamagnetic
cobalt clusters of 8-10 nm size in the films at the interface. The
co-occurrence of superparamagnetism and AHE raises questions regarding the use
of the AHE as a test of the intrinsic nature of ferromagnetism in diluted
magnetic semiconductors.Comment: Physical Review Letters (In press
Control of Mooij correlations at the nanoscale in the disordered metallic Ta - nanoisland FeNi multilayers
Localisation phenomena in highly disordered metals close to the extreme
conditions determined by the Mott-Ioffe-Regel (MIR) limit when the electron
mean free path is approximately equal to the interatomic distance is a
challenging problem. Here, to shed light on these localisation phenomena, we
studied the dc transport and optical conductivity properties of nanoscaled
multilayered films composed of disordered metallic Ta and magnetic FeNi
nanoisland layers, where ferromagnetic FeNi nanoislands have giant magnetic
moments of 10^3-10^5 Bohr magnetons (\mu_B). In these multilayered structures,
FeNi nanoisland giant magnetic moments are interacting due to the indirect
exchange forces acting via the Ta electron subsystem. We discovered that the
localisation phenomena in the disordered Ta layer lead to a decrease in the
Drude contribution of free charge carriers and the appearance of the low-energy
electronic excitations in the 1-2 eV spectral range characteristic of
electronic correlations, which may accompany the formation of electronic
inhomogeneities. From the consistent results of the dc transport and optical
studies we found that with an increase in the FeNi layer thickness across the
percolation threshold evolution from the superferromagnetic to ferromagnetic
behaviour within the FeNi layer leads to the delocalisation of Ta electrons
from the associated localised electronic states. On the contrary, we discovered
that when the FeNi layer is discontinuous and represented by randomly
distributed superparamagnetic FeNi nanoislands, the Ta layer normalized dc
conductivity falls down below the MIR limit by about 60%. The discovered effect
leading to the dc conductivity fall below the MIR limit can be associated with
non-ergodicity and purely quantum (many-body) localisation phenomena, which
need to be challenged further.Comment: 29 pages, 8 figures. This is a post-peer-review, precopyedit version
of an article published in Scientific Reports. The final authenticated
version is available online at http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-78185-
Controlled Transformation of Electrical, Magnetic and Optical Material Properties by Ion Beams
Key circumstance of radical progress for technology of XXI century is the
development of a technique which provides controllable producing
three-dimensional patterns incorporating regions of nanometer sizes and
required physical and chemical properties. Our paper for the first time
proposes the method of purposeful direct transformation of the most important
substance physical properties, such as electrical, magnetic, optical and others
by controllable modification of solid state atomic constitution.
The basis of the new technology is discovered by us effect of selective atom
removing out of thin di- and polyatomic films by beams of accelerated
particles. Potentials of that technique have been investigated and confirmed by
our numerous experiments. It has been shown, particularly, that selective atom
removing allows to transform in a controllable way insulators into metals,
non-magnetics into magnetics, to change radically optical features and some
other properties of materials.
The opportunity to remove selectively atoms of a certain sort out of solid
state compounds is, as such, of great interest in creating technology
associated primarily with needs of nanoelectronics as well as many other
"nano-problems" of XXI century.Comment: 22 pages, PDF, 9 figure
Assessment of diagnostic approaches to idiopathic sudden sensorineural hearing loss and their influence on treatment and outcome
Slow relaxation of conductance of quasi-two-dimensional highly disordered MIS structures
Temperature dependence of conductance of electrostatically disordered quasi-2D semiconductor systems near an insulator-metal percolation transition
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