406 research outputs found
Spin orientation of a two-dimensional electron gas by a high-frequency electric field
Coupling of spin states and space motion of conduction electrons due to
spin-orbit interaction opens up possibilities for manipulation of the electron
spins by electrical means. It is shown here that spin orientation of a
two-dimensional electron gas can be achieved by excitation of the carriers with
a linearly polarized high-frequency electric field. In (001)-grown quantum well
structures excitation with in-plane ac electric field induces orientation of
the electron spins along the quantum well normal, with the spin sign and the
magnitude depending on the field polarization.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
Frequency dependence of induced spin polarization and spin current in quantum wells
Dynamic response of two-dimensional electron systems with spin-orbit
interaction is studied theoretically on the basis of quantum kinetic equation,
taking into account elastic scattering of electrons. The spin polarization and
spin current induced by the applied electric field are calculated for the whole
class of electron systems described by p-linear spin-orbit Hamiltonians. The
absence of nonequilibrium intrinsic static spin currents is confirmed for these
systems with arbitrary (nonparabolic) electron energy spectrum. Relations
between the spin polarization, spin current, and electric current are
established. The general results are applied to the quantum wells grown in
[001] and [110] crystallographic directions, with both Rashba and Dresselhaus
types of spin-orbit coupling. It is shown that the existence of the fixed
(momentum-independent) precession axes in [001]-grown wells with equal Rashba
and Dresselhaus spin velocities or in symmetric [110]-grown wells leads to
vanishing spin polarizability at arbitrary frequency of the applied electric
field. This property is explained by the absence of Dyakonov-Perel-Kachorovskii
spin relaxation for the spins polarized along these precession axes. As a
result, a considerable frequency dispersion of spin polarization at very low
frequency in the vicinity of the fixed precession axes is predicted. Possible
effects of extrinsic spin-orbit coupling on the obtained results are discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures; published with minor corrections in Phys. Rev.
The Level Spacing Distribution Near the Anderson Transition
For a disordered system near the Anderson transition we show that the
nearest-level-spacing distribution has the asymptotics for s\gg \av{s}\equiv 1 which is universal and intermediate
between the Gaussian asymptotics in a metal and the Poisson in an insulator.
(Here the critical exponent and the numerical coefficient
depend only on the dimensionality ). It is obtained by mapping the energy
level distribution to the Gibbs distribution for a classical one-dimensional
gas with a pairwise interaction. The interaction, consistent with the universal
asymptotics of the two-level correlation function found previously, is proved
to be the power-law repulsion with the exponent .Comment: REVTeX, 8 pages, no figure
Spin magnetotransport in two-dimensional hole systems
Spin current of two-dimensional holes occupying the ground-state subband in
an asymmetric quantum well and interacting with static disorder potential is
calculated in the presence of a weak magnetic field H perpendicular to the well
plane. Both spin-orbit coupling and Zeeman coupling are taken into account. It
is shown that the applied electric field excites both the transverse
(spin-Hall) and diagonal spin currents, the latter changes its sign at a finite
H and becomes greater than the spin-Hall current as H increases. The effective
spin-Hall conductivity introduced to describe the spin response in Hall bars is
considerably enhanced by the magnetic field in the case of weak disorder and
demonstrates a non-monotonic dependence on H.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, published in Phys. Rev.
Restrictions on modeling spin injection by resistor networks
Because of the technical difficulties of solving spin transport equations in
inhomogeneous systems, different resistor networks are widely applied for
modeling spin transport. By comparing an analytical solution for spin injection
across a ferromagnet - paramagnet junction with a resistor model approach, its
essential limitations stemming from inhomogeneous spin populations are
clarified.Comment: To be published in a special issue of Semicond. Sci. Technol., Guest
editor Prof. G. Landweh
Drift-diffusion model for spin-polarized transport in a non-degenerate 2DEG controlled by a spin-orbit interaction
We apply the Wigner function formalism to derive drift-diffusion transport
equations for spin-polarized electrons in a III-V semiconductor single quantum
well. Electron spin dynamics is controlled by the linear in momentum spin-orbit
interaction. In a studied transport regime an electron momentum scattering rate
is appreciably faster than spin dynamics. A set of transport equations is
defined in terms of a particle density, spin density, and respective fluxes.
The developed model allows studying of coherent dynamics of a non-equilibrium
spin polarization. As an example, we consider a stationary transport regime for
a heterostructure grown along the (0, 0, 1) crystallographic direction. Due to
the interplay of the Rashba and Dresselhaus spin-orbit terms spin dynamics
strongly depends on a transport direction. The model is consistent with results
of pulse-probe measurement of spin coherence in strained semiconductor layers.
It can be useful for studying properties of spin-polarized transport and
modeling of spintronic devices operating in the diffusive transport regime.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figure
Shape Analysis of the Level Spacing Distribution around the Metal Insulator Transition in the Three Dimensional Anderson Model
We present a new method for the numerical treatment of second order phase
transitions using the level spacing distribution function . We show that
the quantities introduced originally for the shape analysis of eigenvectors can
be properly applied for the description of the eigenvalues as well. The
position of the metal--insulator transition (MIT) of the three dimensional
Anderson model and the critical exponent are evaluated. The shape analysis of
obtained numerically shows that near the MIT is clearly different
from both the Brody distribution and from Izrailev's formula, and the best
description is of the form , with
. This is in good agreement with recent analytical results.Comment: 14 pages in plain TeX, 6 figures upon reques
Spin coherence of a two-dimensional electron gas induced by resonant excitation of trions and excitons in CdTe/(Cd,Mg)Te quantum wells
The mechanisms for generation of long-lived spin coherence in a
two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) have been studied experimentally by means
of a picosecond pump-probe Kerr rotation technique. CdTe/(Cd,Mg)Te quantum
wells with a diluted 2DEG were investigated. The strong Coulomb interaction
between electrons and holes, which results in large binding energies of neutral
excitons and negatively charged excitons (trions), allows one to address
selectively the exciton or trion states by resonant optical excitation.
Different scenarios of spin coherence generation were analyzed theoretically,
among them the direct trion photocreation, the formation of trions from
photogenerated excitons and the electron-exciton exchange scattering. Good
agreement between experiment and theory is found.Comment: 18 pages, 20 figure
Suppression of spin-orbit effects in 1D system
We report the absence of spin effects such as spin-galvanic effect, spin
polarization and spin current under static electric field and
inter-spin-subband absorption in 1D system with spin-orbit interaction of
arbitrary form. It was also shown that the accounting for the direct
interaction of electron spin with magnetic field violates this statement.Comment: 8 pages, 1Figur
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