286 research outputs found
Ultra-efficient Cooling in Ferromagnet-Superconductor Microrefrigerators
A promising scheme for electron microrefrigeration based on
ferromagnet-superconductor contacts is presented. In this setup, cooling power
densities up to 600 nW/m can be achieved leading to electronic
temperature reductions largely exceeding those obtained with existing
superconductor-normal metal tunnel contacts. Half-metallic CrO/Al bilayers
are indicated as ideal candidates for the implementation of the device.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Applied Physics Letter
Probing the local temperature of a 2DEG microdomain with a quantum dot: measurement of electron-phonon interaction
We demonstrate local detection of the electron temperature in a
two-dimensionalmicrodomain using a quantum dot. Our method relies on the
observation that a temperature bias across the dot changes the functional form
of Coulomb-blockade peaks. We apply our results to the investigation of
electron-energy relaxation at subkelvin temperatures, find that the energy flux
from electrons into phonons is proportional to the fifth power of temperature,
and give a measurement of the coupling constant.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Ferromagnetic resonant tunneling diodes as spin polarimeters and polarizers
A method for measuring the degree of spin polarization of magnetic materials
based on spin-dependent resonant tunneling is proposed. The device we consider
is a ballistic double-barrier resonant structure consisting of a ferromagnetic
layer embedded between two insulating barriers. A simple procedure, based on a
detailed analysis of the differential conductance, allows to accurately
determine the polarization of the ferromagnet. The spin-filtering character of
such a system is furthermore addressed. We show that a 100% spin selectivity
can be achieved under appropriate conditions. This approach is believed to be
well suited for the investigation of diluted magnetic semiconductor
heterostructures.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Interplay between disorder and intersubband collective excitations in the two-dimensional electron gas
Intersubband absorption in modulation-doped quantum wells is usually
appropriately described as a collective excitation of the confined
two-dimensional electron gas. At sufficiently low electron density and low
temperatures, however, the in-plane disorder potential is able to damp the
collective modes by mixing the intersubband charge-density excitation with
single-particle localized modes. Here we show experimental evidence of this
transition. The results are analyzed within the framework of the density
functional theory and highlight the impact of the interplay between disorder
and the collective response of the two-dimensional electron gas in
semiconductor heterostructures.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, RevTeX. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. B
(Rapid. Comm.
Landau Cooling in Metal-Semiconductor Nanostructures
An electron-cooling principle based on Landau quantization is proposed for
nanoscale conductor systems. Operation relies on energy-selective electron
tunneling into a two-dimensional electron gas in quantizing magnetic fields.
This quantum refrigerator provides significant cooling power (~1 nW at a few K
for realistic parameters) and offers a unique flexibility thanks to its
tunability via the magnetic-field intensity. The available performance is only
marginally affected by nonidealities such as disorder or imperfections in the
semiconductor. Methods for the implementation of this system and its
characterization are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 4 color figure
Crossed Andreev reflection-induced magnetoresistance
We show that very large negative magnetoresistance can be obtained in
magnetic trilayers in a current-in-plane geometry owing to the existence of
crossed Andreev reflection. This spin-valve consists of a thin superconducting
film sandwiched between two ferromagnetic layers whose magnetization is allowed
to be either parallelly or antiparallelly aligned. For a suitable choice of
structure parameters and nearly fully spin-polarized ferromagnets the
magnetoresistance can exceed -80%. Our results are relevant for the design and
implementation of spintronic devices exploiting ferromagnet-superconductor
structures.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, final published versio
Hybrid InAs nanowire-vanadium proximity SQUID
We report the fabrication and characterization of superconducting quantum
interference devices (SQUIDs) based on InAs nanowires and vanadium
superconducting electrodes. These mesoscopic devices are found to be extremely
robust against thermal cycling and to operate up to temperatures of ~K
with reduced power dissipation. We show that our geometry allows to obtain
nearly-symmetric devices with very large magnetic-field modulation of the
critical current. All these properties make these devices attractive for
on-chip quantum-circuit implementation.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure
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