7,402 research outputs found
Single magnetic adsorbates on s-wave superconductors
In superconductors, magnetic impurities induce a pair-breaking potential for
Cooper pairs, which locally affects the Bogoliubov quasiparticles and gives
rise to Yu-Shiba-Rusinov (YSR or Shiba, in short) bound states in the density
of states (DoS). These states carry information on the magnetic coupling
strength of the impurity with the superconductor, which determines the
many-body ground state properties of the system. Recently, the interest in
Shiba physics was boosted by the prediction of topological superconductivity
and Majorana modes in magnetically coupled chains and arrays of Shiba
impurities. Here, we review the physical insights obtained by scanning
tunneling microscopy into single magnetic adsorbates on the -wave
superconductor lead (Pb). We explore the tunneling processes into Shiba states,
show how magnetic anisotropy affects many-body excitations, and determine the
crossing of the many-body groundstate through a quantum phase transition.
Finally, we discuss the coupling of impurities into dimers and chains and their
relation to Majorana physics.Comment: 18 pages, 17 figures, revie
Tuning the magnetic anisotropy of single molecules
The magnetism of single atoms and molecules is governed by the atomic scale
environment. In general, the reduced symmetry of the surrounding splits the
states and aligns the magnetic moment along certain favorable directions. Here,
we show that we can reversibly modify the magnetocrystalline anisotropy by
manipulating the environment of single iron(II) porphyrin molecules adsorbed on
Pb(111) with the tip of a scanning tunneling microscope. When we decrease the
tip--molecule distance, we first observe a small increase followed by an
exponential decrease of the axial anisotropy on the molecules. This is in
contrast to the monotonous increase observed earlier for the same molecule with
an additional axial Cl ligand. We ascribe the changes in the anisotropy of both
species to a deformation of the molecules in the presence of the attractive
force of the tip, which leads to a change in the level alignment. These
experiments demonstrate the feasibility of a precise tuning of the magnetic
anisotropy of an individual molecule by mechanical control.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures; online at Nano Letters (2015
Zero-mode contribution to the light-front Hamiltonian of Yukawa type models
Light-front Hamiltonian for Yukawa type models is determined without the
framework of canonical light-front formalism. Special attention is given to the
contribution of zero modes.Comment: 14 pages, Latex, revised version with minor changes, Submitted to
J.Phys.
Characterization of cells of amniotic fluids by immunological identification of intermediate-sized filaments: Presence of cells of different tissue origin
Antibodies against intermediate-sized filaments, of the prekeratin or vimentin type, were used to investigate the presence of these filaments by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy in cultured and non-cultured amniotic fluid cells, in frozen sections of the placenta and in isolated cells of the amniotic epithelium. Two major classes of cells can be cultured from amniotic fluids, namely cells of epithelial origin containing filaments of the prekeratin type and cells of different origin which contain filaments of the vimentin type but are negative when tested with antibodies to epidermal prekeratin. The presence of prekeratin type filaments correlates with the morphology of colonies of amniotic fluid cell cultures in vitro as classified by Hoehn et al. (1974). Cells of E-type colonies are shown to be of epithelial origin. In contrast our data indicate a different origin of almost all cells of F-type colonies and of the large majority of cells of AF-type colonies. Cells of epithelial origin and positively stained with antibodies to epidermal prekeratin are occasionally scattered in F-type colonies and in variable percentages (up to 30%) in AF-type colonies. Surprisingly, cryostat sections of the amniotic epithelium and isolated groups of amniotic cells showed positive reactions with both antibodies to vimentin and prekeratin. The possibility that amniotic cells may be different from other epithelial cells in that they contain both types of filaments simultaneously already in situ is presently under investigation
Magnetic anisotropy in Shiba bound states across a quantum phase transition
The exchange coupling between magnetic adsorbates and a superconducting
substrate leads to Shiba states inside the superconducting energy gap and a
Kondo resonance outside the gap. The exchange coupling strength determines
whether the quantum many-body ground state is a Kondo singlet or a singlet of
the paired superconducting quasiparticles. Here, we use scanning tunneling
spectroscopy to identify the different quantum ground states of Manganese
phthalocyanine on Pb(111). We observe Shiba states, which are split into
triplets by magnetocrystalline anisotropy. Their characteristic spectral weight
yields an unambiguous proof of the nature of the quantum ground state.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Long-range repulsive interaction between TTF molecules on a metal surface induced by charge transfer
The low-coverage adsorption of a molecular electron donor,
tetrathiafulvalene, on Au(111) is characterized by the spontaneous formation of
superlattice of monomers, whose spacing exceeds the equilibrium distance of
non-covalent interactions and depends on coverage. The origin of this peculiar
growth mode is due to a long-range repulsive interaction between molecules. The
analysis of molecular-pair distributions obtained by scanning tunneling
microscopy measurements permits us to determine that the nature of TTF
intermolecular interactions on Au (111) is electrostatic. A repulsion between
molecules is caused by the accumulation of charge due to electron donation into
the metal surface, as pictured through density functional theory calculations
Direct imaging of the inducedâfit effect in molecular selfâassembly
Molecular recognition is a crucial driving force for molecular selfâassembly. In many cases molecules arrange in the lowest energy configuration following a lockâandâkey principle. When molecular flexibility comes into play, the inducedâfit effect may govern the selfâassembly. Here, the selfâassembly of dicyanovinylâhexathiophene (DCV6T) molecules, a prototype specie for highly efficient organic solar cells, on Au(111) by using lowâtemperature scanning tunneling microscopy and atomic force microscopy is investigated. DCV6T molecules assemble on the surface forming either islands or chains. In the islands the molecules are straightâthe lowest energy configuration in gas phaseâand expose the dicyano moieties to form hydrogen bonds with neighbor molecules. In contrast, the structure of DCV6T molecules in the chain assemblies deviates significantly from their gasâphase analogues. The seemingly energetically unfavorable bent geometry is enforced by hydrogenâbonding intermolecular interactions. Density functional theory calculations of molecular dimers quantitatively demonstrate that the deformation of individual molecules optimizes the intermolecular bonding structure. The intermolecular bonding energy thus drives the chain structure formation, which is an expression of the inducedâfit effect
Two-dimensional magnetism in the pnictide superconductor parent material SrFeAsF probed by muon-spin relaxation
We report muon-spin relaxation measurements on SrFeAsF, which is the parent
compound of a newly discovered iron-arsenic-fluoride based series of
superconducting materials. We find that this material has very similar magnetic
properties to LaFeAsO, such as separated magnetic and structural transitions
(TN = 120 K, Ts = 175 K), contrasting with SrFe2As2 where they are coincident.
The muon oscillation frequencies fall away very sharply at TN, which suggests
that the magnetic exchange between the layers is weaker than in comparable
oxypnictide compounds. This is consistent with our specific heat measurements,
which find that the entropy change S = 0.05 J/mol/K largely occurs at the
structural transition and there is no anomaly at TN.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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