242 research outputs found
Transport through anisotropic magnetic molecules with partially ferromagnetic leads: Spin-charge conversion and negative differential conductance
We theoretically investigate inelastic transport through anisotropic magnetic
molecules weakly coupled to one ferromagnetic and one nonmagnetic lead. We find
that the current is suppressed over wide voltage ranges due to spin blockade.
In this system, spin blockade is associated with successive spin flips of the
molecular spins and depends on the anisotropy energy barrier. This leads to the
appearance of a window of bias voltages between the Coulomb blockade and spin
blockade regimes where the current is large and to negative differential
conductance at low temperatures. Remarkably, negative differential conductance
is also present close to room temperature. Spin-blockade behavior is
accompanied by super-Poissonian shot noise, like in nonmagnetic quantum dots.
Finally, we show that the charge transmitted through the molecule between
initial preparation in a certain spin state and infinite time very strongly
depends on the initial spin state in certain parameter ranges. Thus the
molecule can act as a spin-charge converter, an effect potentially useful as a
read-out mechanism for molecular spintronics.Comment: 8 pages with 5 figures, version as publishe
Cal Poly San Luis Obispo Bridge House Remodel Project
The Bridge House, located in Poly Canyon, was originally constructed in 1968. Its original purpose served as a seismic activity lab for Architectural Engineering (ARCE) students. I joined a team of 4 ARCE students, making this an interdisciplinary project. There have been a few other groups who have tried to complete this project but have always fallen short. With the calculations and structural drawings provided by the ARCE students, we had a design and plan to fabricate the hand railings. We have completed 13 handrails, with four already installed on the structure by another group, that have now replaced the boards which have been restricting public access. As of June 11th, 2019 we have completed the project
Transport through a quantum dot with excitonic dot-lead coupling
We study the effect of a dot-lead interaction on transport through a quantum
dot hybridized to two semi-infinite Luttinger-liquid leads. A bosonization
approach is applied to treat the interaction between charge fluctuations on the
dot and the dynamically generated image charge in the leads. The nonequilibrium
distribution function of the dot and the tunneling current are computed within
a master-equation approach. The presence of the excitonic dot-lead coupling is
found to enhance transport in the vicinity of the Coulomb-blockade threshold.
This behavior is in contrast to the usual power-law suppression of electronic
tunneling which is found if this interaction is ignored.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure
Spin amplification, reading, and writing in transport through anisotropic magnetic molecules
Inelastic transport through a single magnetic molecule weakly coupled to
metallic leads is studied theoretically. We consider dynamical processes that
are relevant for writing, storing, and reading spin information in molecular
memory devices. Magnetic anisotropy is found to be crucial for slow spin
relaxation. In the presence of anisotropy we find giant spin amplification: The
spin accumulated in the leads if a bias voltage is applied to a molecule
prepared in a spin-polarized state can be made exponentially large in a
characteristic energy divided by temperature. For one ferromagnetic and one
paramagnetic lead the molecular spin can be reversed by applying a bias voltage
even in the absence of a magnetic field. We propose schemes for reading and
writing spin information based on our findings.Comment: 5+ pages with 5 figure
Effect of a Coulombic dot-lead coupling on the dynamics of a quantum dot
The effect of a Coulombic coupling on the dynamics of a quantum dot
hybridized to leads is determined. The calculation treats the interaction
between charge fluctuations on the dot and the dynamically generated image
charge in the leads. A formally exact solution is presented for a dot coupled
to a Luttinger liquid and an approximate solution, equivalent to treating the
lead dynamics within a random phase approximation, is given for a dot coupled
to a two- or three-dimensional metallic lead. The leading divergences arising
from the long-ranged Coulomb interaction are found to cancel, so that in the
two- and three-dimensional cases the quantum-dot dynamics is equivalent to that
obtained by neglecting both the dot-lead Coulomb coupling and the Coulomb
renormalization of the lead electrons, while in the one-dimensional case the
dot-lead mixing is enhanced relative to the non-interacting case. Explicit
results are given for the short-time dynamics.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, version as publishe
Cotunneling and non-equilibrium magnetization in magnetic molecular monolayers
Transport and non-equilibrium magnetization in monolayers of magnetic
molecules subject to a bias voltage are considered. We apply a master-equation
approach going beyond the sequential-tunneling approximation to study the
Coulomb-blockade regime. While the current is very small in this case, the
magnetization shows changes of the order of the saturation magnetization for
small variations of the bias voltage. Inelastic cotunneling processes manifest
themselves as differential-conductance steps, which are accompanied by much
larger changes in the magnetization. In addition, the magnetization in the
Coulomb-blockade regime exhibits strong signatures of sequential tunneling
processes de-exciting molecular states populated by inelastic cotunneling. We
also consider the case of a single molecule, finding that cotunneling processes
lead to the occurrence of magnetic sidebands below the Coulomb-blockade
threshold. In the context of molecular electronics, we study how additional
spin relaxation suppresses the fine structure in transport and magnetization.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, version as publishe
Extending the Cyber Capabilities of Small to Midsize Businesses
This project explores disparities in the cybersecurity practices of small to midsize businesses in comparison to larger organizations with more resources to allocate to cybersecurity. While the adoption of technical solutions offers many advantages, SMBs are struggling to maintain good cybersecurity practices in this era of digital transformation. Considering the overall security climate it is clear that SMBs are vulnerable to cyber threats, are being attacked more often and lack the proper resources or knowledge to effectively address threats. This paper proposes a model for SMBs to enhance their cyber capabilities with cybersecurity assessments and regular training provided by the National Guard’s Defensive Cyber Operations Element (DCO-E). Leveraging the capabilities of the DCO-E, in effect a “national cybersecurity squad,” to support a national cyber readiness and education campaign could be an effective method to enhance the cybersecurity of SMBs. The proposed model is supported with a initial survey results showing a promising willingness and support from SMBs
Manganese and carbon lines as temperature indicators
Selected hyperfine structure broadened lines of various excitations and the carbon line at 5380 Å are tested as temperature diagnostics for photospheric heterogeneities. This is done by comparing the observed center-to-limb variation of the equivalent widths of these lines with predictions by several proposed models of homogeneous type. Model 10 (Elste, 1968), which also explains the limb-darkening of the continuum in the same spectral range, provides a better basis for the analysis of heterogeneities at different photospheric levels than other recent reference models.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/43705/1/11207_2004_Article_BF00155340.pd
Resonant and Kondo tunneling through molecular magnets
Transport through molecular magnets is studied in the regime of strong
coupling to the leads. We consider a resonant-tunneling model where the
electron spin in a quantum dot or molecule is coupled to an additional local,
anisotropic spin via exchange interaction. The two opposite regimes dominated
by resonant tunneling and by Kondo transport, respectively, are considered. In
the resonant-tunneling regime, the stationary state of the impurity spin is
calculated for arbitrarily strong molecule-lead coupling using a
master-equation approach, which treats the exchange interaction perturbatively.
We find that the characteristic fine structure in the differential conductance
persists even if the hybridization energy exceeds thermal energies. Transport
in the Kondo regime is studied within a diagrammatic approach. We show that
magnetic anisotropy gives rise to a splitting of the Kondo peak at low bias
voltages.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, version as publishe
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