18 research outputs found
Tuning paramagnetic spin-excitations of single adatoms
Around 50 years ago, Doniach [Proc. Phys. Soc. 91, 86 (1967)] predicted the
existence of paramagnons in nearly ferromagnetic materials, recently measured
in bulk Pd [Phys. Rev. Lett. 105, 027207 (2010)]. Here we predict the analogous
effect for single adatoms, namely paramagnetic spin-excitations (PSE). Based on
time-dependent density functional theory, we demonstrate that these overdamped
excitations acquire a well-defined peak structure in the meV energy region when
the adatom's Stoner criterion for magnetism is close to the critical point. In
addition, our calculations reveal a subtle tunability and enhancement of PSE by
external magnetic fields, exceeding by far the response of bulk paramagnons and
even featuring the atomic version of a quantum phase transition. We further
demonstrate how PSE can be detected as moving steps in the
signal of state-of-the-art inelastic scanning tunneling spectroscopy, opening a
potential route for experimentally accessing fundamental electronic properties
of non-magnetic adatoms, such as the Stoner parameter.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Directional shift current in mirror-symmetric BCN
We present a theoretical study of the shift current in a noncentrosymmetric
polytype of graphitic BCN. We find that the photoconductivity near the
fundamental gap is strongly anisotropic due to the vanishing of particular
tensor components not foretold by point-group symmetry arguments; this is a
consequence of dipole selection rules imposed by mirror symmetry, which imply
that the relative parities between valence and conduction bands are key for
determining the directionality of the band-edge response. In addition, the
band-edge photoconductivity turns out to be rather large, with the peak value
occurring in an energy range suitable for optical manipulationComment: 7 pages, 4 figure
A Strategy to Create Spin-Split Metallic Bands on Silicon Using a Dense Alloy Layer
To exploit Rashba effect in a 2D electron gas on silicon surface for spin transport, it is necessary to have surface reconstruction with spin-split metallic surface-state bands. However, metals with strong spin-orbit coupling (e.g., Bi, Tl, Sb, Pt) induce reconstructions on silicon with almost exclusively spin-split insulating bands. We propose a strategy to create spin-split metallic bands using a dense 2D alloy layer containing a metal with strong spin-orbit coupling and another metal to modify the surface reconstruction. Here we report two examples, i.e., alloying [Image: see text] reconstruction with Na and Tl/Si(111)1 × 1 reconstruction with Pb. The strategy provides a new paradigm for creating metallic surface state bands with various spin textures on silicon and therefore enhances the possibility to integrate fascinating and promising capabilities of spintronics with current semiconductor technology