96 research outputs found
Room temperature spin thermoelectrics in metallic films
Considering metallic films at room temperature, we present the first
theoretical study of the spin Nernst and thermal Edelstein effects which takes
into account dynamical spin-orbit coupling, i.e., direct spin-orbit coupling
with the vibrating lattice (phonons) and impurities. This gives rise to two
novel processes, namely a dynamical Elliott-Yafet spin relaxation and a
dynamical side-jump mechanism. Both are the high-temperature counterparts of
the well-known Elliott-Yafet and side-jump, central to the current
understanding of the spin Hall, spin Nernst and Edelstein effects at low .
We consider the experimentally relevant regime , with the Debye
temperature, as the latter is lower than room temperature in transition metals
such as Pt, Au and Ta typically employed in spin injection/extraction
experiments. We show that the interplay between intrinsic (Bychkov-Rashba type)
and extrinsic (dynamical) spin-orbit coupling yields a nonlinear -
dependence of the spin Nernst and spin Hall conductivities.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Spin Hall effects due to phonon skew scattering
A diversity of spin Hall effects in metallic systems is known to rely on Mott
skew scattering. In this work its high-temperature counterpart, phonon skew
scattering, which is expected to be of foremost experimental relevance, is
investigated. In particular, the phonon skew scattering spin Hall conductivity
is found to be practically -independent for temperatures above the Debye
temperature . As a consequence, in Rashba-like systems a high- linear
behavior of the spin Hall angle demonstrates the dominance of extrinsic
spin-orbit scattering only if the intrinsic spin splitting is smaller than the
temperature.Comment: Accepted version, 4 (+1) pages, 2 figure
Absorbing/Emitting Phonons with one dimensional MOSFETs
We consider nanowires in the field effect transistor device configuration.
Modeling each nanowire as a one dimensional lattice with random site
potentials, we study the heat exchanges between the nanowire electrons and the
substrate phonons, when electron transport is due to phonon-assisted hops
between localized states. Shifting the nanowire conduction band with a metallic
gate induces different behaviors. When the Fermi potential is located near the
band center, a bias voltage gives rise to small local heat exchanges which
fluctuate randomly along the nanowire. When it is located near one of the band
edges, the bias voltage yields heat currents which flow mainly from the
substrate towards the nanowire near one boundary of the nanowire, and in the
opposite direction near the other boundary. This opens interesting perspectives
for heat management at submicron scales: Arrays of parallel gated nanowires
could be used for a field control of phonon emission/absorption.Comment: 9 pages, 11 figure
Steering Zitterbewegung in driven Dirac systems: From persistent modes to echoes
Although Zitterbewegung—the jittery motion of relativistic particles—was known since 1930 and was predicted in solid-state systems long ago, it has been directly measured so far only in so-called quantum simulators, i.e., quantum systems under strong control, such as trapped ions and Bose-Einstein condensates. A reason for the lack of further experimental evidence is the transient nature of wave-packet Zitterbewegung. Here, we study how the jittery motion can be manipulated in Dirac systems via time-dependent potentials with the goal of slowing down/preventing its decay or of generating its revival. For the harmonic driving of a mass term, we find persistent Zitterbewegung modes in pristine, i.e., scattering free, systems. Furthermore, an effective time-reversal protocol—the “Dirac quantum time mirror”—is shown to retrieve Zitterbewegung through echoes
Floquet oscillations in periodically driven Dirac systems
Electrons in a lattice exhibit time-periodic motion, known as Bloch oscillation, when subject to an additional static electric field. Here, we show that a corresponding dynamics can occur upon replacing the spatially periodic potential by a time-periodic driving: Floquet oscillations of charge carriers in a spatially homogeneous system. The time lattice of the driving gives rise to Floquet bands that take on the role of the usual Bloch bands. For two different drivings (harmonic driving and periodic kicking through pulses) of systems with linear dispersion we demonstrate the existence of such oscillations, both by directly propagating wave packets and based on a complementary Floquet analysis. The Floquet oscillations feature richer oscillation patterns than their Bloch counterpart and enable the imaging of Floquet bands. Moreover, their period can be directly tuned through the driving frequency. Such oscillations should be experimentally observable in effective Dirac systems, such as graphene, when illuminated with circularly polarized light
Theory of magnetotransport in shaped topological insulator nanowires
We show that shaped topological insulator (TI) nanowires, i.e. such that their cross-section radius varies along the wire length, can be tuned into a number of different transport regimes when immersed in a homogeneous coaxial magnetic field. This is in contrast with widely studied tubular nanowires with constant cross-section, and is due to magnetic confinement of Dirac surface carriers. In flat 2D systems such a confinement requires non-homogeneous magnetic fields, while for shaped nanowires of standard size homogeneous fields of the order of B∼1T are sufficient. We put recent work [Kozlovsky et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 124, 126804 (2020)] into broader context and extend it to deal with axially symmetric wire geometries with arbitrary radial profile. A dumbbell-shaped TI nanowire is used as a paradigmatic example for transport through a constriction and shown to be tunable into five different transport regimes: (i) conductance steps, (ii) resonant transmission, (iii) current suppression, (iv) Coulomb blockade, and (v) transport through a triple quantum dot. Switching between regimes is achieved by modulating the strength of a coaxial magnetic field and does not require strict axial symmetry of the wire cross-section. As such, it should be observable in TI nanowires fabricated with available experimental techniques
Quasiclassical approach and spin-orbit coupling
We discuss the quasiclassical Green function method for a two-dimensional
electron gas in the presence of spin-orbit coupling, with emphasis on the
meaning of the -integration procedure. As an application of our approach,
we demonstrate how the spin-Hall conductivity, in the presence of spin-flip
scattering, can be easily obtained from the spin-density continuity equation.Comment: 3 pages, Submitted to Physica
Dirac Landau levels for surfaces with constant negative curvature
Studies of the formation of Landau levels based on the Schr\"odinger equation
for electrons constrained to curved surfaces have a long history. These include
as prime examples surfaces with constant positive and negative curvature, the
sphere [Phys. Rev. Lett. 51, 605 (1983)] and the pseudosphere [Annals of
Physics 173, 185 (1987)]. Now, topological insulators, hosting Dirac-type
surface states, provide a unique platform to experimentally examine such
quantum Hall physics in curved space. Hence, extending previous work we
consider solutions of the Dirac equation for the pseudosphere for both, the
case of an overall perpendicular magnetic field and a homogeneous coaxial,
thereby locally varying, magnetic field. For both magnetic-field
configurations, we provide analytical solutions for spectra and eigenstates.
For the experimentally relevant case of a coaxial magnetic field we find that
the Landau levels split and show a peculiar scaling , thereby
characteristically differing from the usual linear and dependence
of the planar Schr\"odinger and Dirac case, respectively. We compare our
analytical findings to numerical results that we also extend to the case of the
Minding surface
Gate-modulated thermopower of disordered nanowires: II. Variable-range hopping regime
International audienceWe study the thermopower of a disordered nanowire in the field effect transistorconfiguration. After a first paper devoted to the elastic coherent regime (Bosisio R., Fleury G.and Pichard J.-L. 2014 New J. Phys. 16 035004), we consider here the inelastic activated regimetaking place at higher temperatures. In the case where charge transport is thermally assisted byphonons (Mott Variable Range Hopping regime), we use the Miller-Abrahams random resistornetwork model as recently adapted by Jiang et al. for thermoelectric transport. This approachpreviously used to study the bulk of the nanowire impurity band is extended for studying itsedges. In this limit, we show that the typical thermopower is largely enhanced, attaining valueslarger that 10 kB/e ∼ 1 mV K−1 and exhibiting a non-trivial behaviour as a function of thetemperature. A percolation theory by Zvyagin extended to disordered nanowires allows us toaccount for the main observed edge behaviours of the thermopower
Using Activated Transport in Parallel Nanowires for Energy Harvesting and Hot Spot Cooling
12 pages, 8 figures, 4 appendicesInternational audienceWe study arrays of parallel doped semiconductor nanowires in a temperature range where the electrons propagate through the nanowires by phonon assisted hops between localized states. By solving the Random Resistor Network problem, we compute the thermopower , the electrical conductance , and the electronic thermal conductance of the device. We investigate how those quantities depend on the position -- which can be tuned with a back gate -- of the nanowire impurity band with respect to the equilibrium electrochemical potential. We show that large power factors can be reached near the band edges, when self-averages to large values while is small but scales with the number of wires. Calculating the amount of heat exchanged locally between the electrons inside the nanowires and the phonons of the environment, we show that phonons are mainly absorbed near one electrode and emitted near the other when a charge current is driven through the nanowires near their band edges. This phenomenon could be exploited for a field control of the heat exchange between the phonons and the electrons at submicron scales in electronic circuits. It could be also used for cooling hot spots
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