1,140 research outputs found
Entanglement in finite spin rings with noncollinear Ising interaction
We investigate the entanglement properties of finite spin rings, with
noncollinear Ising interaction between nearest neighbours. The orientations of
the Ising axes are determined either by the spin position within the ring
(model A) or by the direction of the bond (model B). In both cases, the
considered spin Hamiltonians have a point group symmetry, rather than a
translation invariance, as in spin rings with collinear Ising interaction. The
ground state of these models exhibit remarkable entanglement properties,
resembling GHZ-like states in the absence of an applied magnetic field (model
B). Besides, the application of an homogeneous magnetic field allows to modify
qualitatively the character of the ground state entanglement, switching from
multipartite to pairwise quantum correlations (both models A and B)
Nuclear spin driven resonant tunnelling of magnetisation in Mn12 acetate
Current theories still fail to give a satisfactory explanation of the
observed quantum phenomena in the relaxation of the magnetisation of the
molecular cluster Mn12 acetate. In the very low temperature regime, Prokof'ev
and Stamp recently proposed that slowly changing dipolar fields and rapidly
fluctuating hyperfine fields play a major role in the tunnelling process. By
means of a faster relaxing minor species of Mn12ac and a new experimental 'hole
digging' method, we measured the intrinsic line width broadening due to local
fluctuating fields, and found strong evidence for the influence of nuclear
spins on resonance tunnelling at very low temperatures (0.04 - 0.3K). At higher
temperature (1.5 - 4K), we observed a homogeneous line width broadening of the
resonance transitions being in agreement with a recent calculation of
Leuenberger and Loss.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Europhys. Let
Hyperfine-induced decoherence in triangular spin-cluster qubits
We investigate hyperfine-induced decoherence in a triangular spin-cluster for
different qubit encodings. Electrically controllable eigenstates of spin
chirality (C_z) show decoherence times that approach milliseconds, two orders
of magnitude longer than those estimated for the eigenstates of the total spin
projection (S_z) and of the partial spin sum (S_{12}). The robustness of
chirality is due to its decoupling from both the total- and individual-spin
components in the cluster. This results in a suppression of the effective
interaction between C_z and the nuclear spin bath
Towards the chemical tuning of entanglement in molecular nanomagnets
Antiferromagnetic spin rings represent prototypical realizations of highly
correlated, low-dimensional systems. Here we theoretically show how the
introduction of magnetic defects by controlled chemical substitutions results
in a strong spatial modulation of spin-pair entanglement within each ring.
Entanglement between local degrees of freedom (individual spins) and collective
ones (total ring spins) are shown to coexist in exchange-coupled ring dimers,
as can be deduced from general symmetry arguments. We verify the persistence of
these features at finite temperatures, and discuss them in terms of
experimentally accessible observables.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Landau Zener method to study quantum phase interference of Fe8 molecular nanomagnets
We present details about an experimental method based on the Landau Zener
model which allows to measure very small tunnel splittings in
molecular clusters Fe8. The measurements are performed with an array of
micro-SQUIDs. The observed oscillations of Delta as a function of the magnetic
field applied along the hard anisotropy axis are explained in terms of
topological quantum interference of two tunnel paths of opposite windings.
Transitions between M = -S and (S - n), with n even or odd, revealed a parity
(symmetry) effect which is analogous to the suppression of tunneling predicted
for half integer spins. This observation is the first direct evidence of the
topological part of the quantum spin phase (Berry phase) in a magnetic system.
The influence of intermolecular dipole interactions on the measured tunnel
splittings are shown.Comment: 6 pages, 14 figures, conference proceedings of MMM 1999, San Jose,
15-18 Nov., session number CD-0
Dynamical Monte Carlo investigation of spin reversals and nonequilibrium magnetization of single-molecule magnets
In this paper, we combine thermal effects with Landau-Zener (LZ) quantum
tunneling effects in a dynamical Monte Carlo (DMC) framework to produce
satisfactory magnetization curves of single-molecule magnet (SMM) systems. We
use the giant spin approximation for SMM spins and consider regular lattices of
SMMs with magnetic dipolar interactions (MDI). We calculate spin reversal
probabilities from thermal-activated barrier hurdling, direct LZ tunneling, and
thermal-assisted LZ tunnelings in the presence of sweeping magnetic fields. We
do systematical DMC simulations for Mn systems with various temperatures
and sweeping rates. Our simulations produce clear step structures in
low-temperature magnetization curves, and our results show that the thermally
activated barrier hurdling becomes dominating at high temperature near 3K and
the thermal-assisted tunnelings play important roles at intermediate
temperature. These are consistent with corresponding experimental results on
good Mn samples (with less disorders) in the presence of little
misalignments between the easy axis and applied magnetic fields, and therefore
our magnetization curves are satisfactory. Furthermore, our DMC results show
that the MDI, with the thermal effects, have important effects on the LZ
tunneling processes, but both the MDI and the LZ tunneling give place to the
thermal-activated barrier hurdling effect in determining the magnetization
curves when the temperature is near 3K. This DMC approach can be applicable to
other SMM systems, and could be used to study other properties of SMM systems.Comment: Phys Rev B, accepted; 10 pages, 6 figure
Theory of severe slowdown in the relaxation of rings and clusters with antiferromagnetic interactions
We show that in the severe slowing down temperature regime the relaxation of
antiferromagnetic rings and similar magnetic nanoclusters is governed by the
quasi-continuum portion of their quadrupolar fluctuation spectrum and not by
the lowest excitation lines. This is at the heart of the intriguing
near-universal power-law temperature dependence of the electronic correlation
frequency with an exponent close to 4. The onset of this behavior is
defined by an energy scale which is fixed by the lowest spin gap .
This explains why experimental curves of for different cluster sizes
and spins nearly coincide when is rescaled by .Comment: new slightly extended version (6 pages, 1 fig. added
Interplay of the Kondo Effect and Spin-Polarized Transport in Magnetic Molecules, Adatoms and Quantum Dots
We study the interplay of the Kondo effect and spin-polarized tunneling in a
class of systems exhibiting uniaxial magnetic anisotropy, such as magnetic
molecules, magnetic adatoms, or quantum dots coupled to a single localized
magnetic moment. Using the numerical renormalization group method we calculate
the spectral functions and linear conductance in the Kondo regime. We show that
the exchange coupling between conducting electrons and localized magnetic core
generally leads to suppression of the Kondo effect. We also predict a
nontrivial dependence of the tunnel magnetoresistance on the strength of
exchange coupling and on the anisotropy constant.Comment: 4 pages with 4 EPS figures (version as accepted for publication in
Physical Review Letters
Mechanisms of decoherence in weakly anisotropic molecular magnets
Decoherence mechanisms in crystals of weakly anisotropic magnetic molecules,
such as V15, are studied. We show that an important decohering factor is the
rapid thermal fluctuation of dipolar interactions between magnetic molecules. A
model is proposed to describe the influence of this source of decoherence.
Based on the exact solution of this model, we show that at relatively high
temperatures, about 0.5 K, the quantum coherence in a V15 molecule is not
suppressed, and, in principle, can be detected experimentally. Therefore, these
molecules may be suitable prototype systems for study of physical processes
taking place in quantum computers.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX, 1 figure (PostScript
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