165 research outputs found
Mn-doped II-VI quantum dots: artificial molecular magnets
The notion of artifical atom relies on the capability to change the number of
carriers one by one in semiconductor quantum dots, and the resulting changes in
their electronic structure. Organic molecules with transition metal atoms that
have a net magnetic moment and display hysteretic behaviour are known as single
molecule magnets (SMM). The fabrication of CdTe quantum dots chemically doped
with a controlled number of Mn atoms and with a number of carriers controlled
either electrically or optically paves the way towards a new concept in
nanomagnetism: the artificial single molecule magnet. Here we study the
magnetic properties of a Mn-doped CdTe quantum dot for different charge states
and show to what extent they behave like a single molecule magnet.Comment: Conference article presented at QD2006, Chamonix, May 200
Noncollinear magnetic phases and edge states in graphene quantum Hall bars
Application of a perpendicular magnetic field to charge neutral graphene is
expected to result in a variety of broken symmetry phases, including
antiferromagnetic, canted and ferromagnetic. All these phases open a gap in
bulk but have very different edge states and non-collinear spin order, recently
confirmed experimentally. Here we provide an integrated description of both
edge and bulk for the various magnetic phases of graphene Hall bars making use
of a non-collinear mean field Hubbard model. Our calculations show that, at the
edges, the three types of magnetic order are either enhanced (zigzag) or
suppressed (armchair). Interestingly, we find that preformed local moments in
zigzag edges interact with the quantum Spin Hall like edge states of the
ferromagnetic phase and can induce back-scattering.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Magnetism in graphene nano-islands
We study the magnetic properties of nanometer-sized graphene structures with
triangular and hexagonal shapes terminated by zig-zag edges. We discuss how the
shape of the island, the imbalance in the number of atoms belonging to the two
graphene sublattices, the existence of zero-energy states, and the total and
local magnetic moment are intimately related. We consider electronic
interactions both in a mean-field approximation of the one-orbital Hubbard
model and with density functional calculations. Both descriptions yield values
for the ground state total spin, , consistent with Lieb's theorem for
bipartite lattices. Triangles have a finite for all sizes whereas hexagons
have S=0 and develop local moments above a critical size of nm.Comment: Published versio
Ultrafast Coherent Spectroscopy of the Fermi Edge Singularity
In this work we present a theoretical description of the transient response
of the Fermi Edge Singularity (FES). We study the linear and the nonlinear
response of an n-doped QW to laser pulses in the Coherent Control (CC) and Four
Wave Mixing (FWM) Configurations. By means of a bosonization formalism we
calculate the FWM signal emitted by the sample when it is excited by pulses
spectrally peaked around the FES and we show that the long time behavior of the
nonlinear signal is very similar to the linear case.Comment: Conference paper (13 EP2DS
Exciton Beats in GaAs Quantum Wells: Bosonic Representation and Collective Effects
We discuss light-heavy hole beats observed in transient optical experiments
in GaAs quantum wells in terms of a free-boson coherent state model. This
approach is compared with descriptions based on few-level representations.
Results lead to an interpretation of the beats as due to classical
electromagnetic interference. The boson picture correctly describes photon
excitation of extended states and accounts for experiments involving coherent
control of the exciton density and Rayleigh scattering beating.Comment: 4 pages, no figures. Accepted for publication in Solid State
Communication
Single exciton spectroscopy of single-Mn doped InAs quantum dots
The optical spectroscopy of a single InAs quantum dot doped with a single Mn
atom is studied using a model Hamiltonian that includes the exchange
interactions between the spins of the quantum dot electron-hole pair, the Mn
atom and the acceptor hole. Our model permits to link the photoluminescence
spectra to the Mn spin states after photon emission. We focus on the relation
between the charge state of the Mn, or , and the different spectra
which result through either band-to-band or band-to-acceptor transitions. We
consider both neutral and negatively charged dots. Our model is able to account
for recent experimental results on single Mn doped InAs PL spectra and can be
used to account for future experiments in GaAs quantum dots. Similarities and
differences with the case of single Mn doped CdTe quantum dots are discussed.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure
Theory of single spin inelastic tunneling spectroscopy
Recent work shows that inelastic electron scanning tunneling microscope (STM)
probes the elementary spin excitations of a single and a few magnetic atoms in
a thin insulating layer. Here I show that this new type of spectroscopy is
described using a phenomenological spin-assisted tunneling Hamiltonian. Within
this formalism, the inelastic lineshape is related to the spin spectral
weight of the probed magnetic atom. This accounts for the spin selection rules
observed experimentally. The theory agrees well with existing STM experiments
for single Fe and Mn atoms as well as linear chains a few Mn atoms. The
magnetic anisotropy in the inelastic and the marked odd-even
effects are accounted for by the theory.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Spin-transfer torque on a single magnetic adatom
We theoretically show how the spin orientation of a single magnetic adatom
can be controlled by spin polarized electrons in a scanning tunneling
microscope configuration. The underlying physical mechanism is spin assisted
inelastic tunneling. By changing the direction of the applied current, the
orientation of the magnetic adatom can be completely reversed on a time scale
that ranges from a few nanoseconds to microseconds, depending on bias and
temperature. The changes in the adatom magnetization direction are, in turn,
reflected in the tunneling conductance.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Giant magnetoresistance in ultra-small Graphene based devices
By computing spin-polarized electronic transport across a finite zigzag
graphene ribbon bridging two metallic graphene electrodes, we demonstrate, as a
proof of principle, that devices featuring 100% magnetoresistance can be built
entirely out of carbon. In the ground state a short zig-zag ribbon is an
antiferromagnetic insulator which, when connecting two metallic electrodes,
acts as a tunnel barrier that suppresses the conductance. Application of a
magnetic field turns the ribbon ferromagnetic and conducting, increasing
dramatically the current between electrodes. We predict large magnetoresistance
in this system at liquid nitrogen temperature and 10 Tesla or at liquid helium
temperature and 300 Gauss.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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