5,772 research outputs found
Subband structure of II-VI modulation-doped magnetic quantum wells
Here we investigate the spin-dependent subband structure of newly-developed
Mn-based modulation-doped quantum wells. In the presence of an external
magnetic field, the s-d exchange coupling between carriers and localized d
electrons of the Mn impurities gives rise to large spin splittings resulting in
a magnetic-field dependent subband structure. Within the framework of the
effective-mass approximation, we self-consistently calculate the subband
structure at zero temperature using Density Functional Theory (DFT) with a
Local Spin Density Approximation (LSDA). We present results for the
magnetic-field dependence of the subband structure of shallow ZnSe/ZnCdMnSe
modulation doped quantum wells. Our results show a significant contribution to
the self-consistent potential due to the exchange-correlation term. These
calculations are the first step in the study of a variety of interesting
spin-dependent phenomena, e.g., spin-resolved transport and many-body effects
in polarized two-dimensional electron gases.Comment: 3 pages, 3 postscript figures, submitted to the proceedings of the
10th Brazilian Workshop on Semiconductor Physics (BWSP10
Many-body effects on the ringlike structures in two-subband wells
The longitudinal resistivity of two-dimensional electron gases
formed in wells with two subbands displays ringlike structures when plotted in
a density--magnetic-field diagram, due to the crossings of spin-split Landau
levels (LLs) from distinct subbands. Using spin density functional theory and
linear response, we investigate the shape and spin polarization of these
structures as a function of temperature and magnetic-field tilt angle. We find
that (i) some of the rings "break" at sufficiently low temperatures due to a
quantum Hall ferromagnetic phase transition, thus exhibiting a high degree of
spin polarization (%) within, consistent with the NMR data of Zhang
\textit{et al.} [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 98}, 246802 (2007)], and (ii) for
increasing tilting angles the interplay between the anticrossings due to
inter-LL couplings and the exchange-correlation (XC) effects leads to a
collapse of the rings at some critical angle , in agreement with the
data of Guo \textit{et al.} [Phys. Rev. B {\bf 78}, 233305 (2008)].Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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