225 research outputs found

    Spin diffusion in doped semiconductors

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    The behavior of spin diffusion in doped semiconductors is shown to be qualitatively different than in undoped (intrinsic) ones. Whereas a spin packet in an intrinsic semiconductor must be a multiple-band disturbance, involving inhomogeneous distributions of both electrons and holes, in a doped semiconductor a single-band disturbance is possible. For n-doped nonmagnetic semiconductors the enhancement of diffusion due to a degenerate electron sea in the conduction band is much larger for these single-band spin packets than for charge packets, and can exceed an order of magnitude at low temperatures even for equilibrium dopings as small as 10^16 cm^-3. In n-doped ferromagnetic and semimagnetic semiconductors the motion of spin packets polarized antiparallel to the equilibrium carrier spin polarization is predicted to be an order of magnitude faster than for parallel polarized spin packets. These results are reversed for p-doped semiconductors.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure

    Spin transport theory in ferromagnet/semiconductor systems with non-collinear magnetization configurations

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    We present a comprehensive theory of spin transport in a non-degenerate semiconductor that is in contact with multiple ferromagnetic terminals. The spin dynamics in the semiconductor is studied during a perturbation of a general, non-collinear magnetization configuration and a method is shown to identify the various configurations from current signals. The conventional Landauer-B\"{u}ttiker description for spin transport across Schottky contacts is generalized by the use of a non-linearized I-V relation, and it is extended by taking into account non-coherent transport mechanisms. The theory is used to analyze a three terminal lateral structure where a significant difference in the spin accumulation profile is found when comparing the results of this model with the conventional model.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figure

    beta-decay study of Cu-77

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    A beta-decay study of Cu-77 has been performed at the ISOLDE mass separator with the aim to deduce its beta-decay properties and to obtain spectroscopic information on Zn-77. Neutron-rich copper isotopes were produced by means of proton- or neutron-induced fission reactions on U-238. After the production, Cu-77 was selectively laser ionized, mass separated and sent to different detection systems where beta-gamma and beta-n coincidence data were collected. We report on the deduced half-live, decay scheme, and possible spin assignment of 77Cu

    Magnetic moments of 68^{68}Cug,m^{g,m} and 70^{70}Cug,m1,m2^{g,m_{1},m_{2}} nuclei measured by in-source laser spectroscopy

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    We have obtained information on the atomic hyperfine splitting and, hence, on magnetic moments in neutron rich 68,70^{68, 70}Cu isotopes by scanning the frequency of the narrow-band laser of the first excitation step in the resonance ionization laser ion source. The deduced magnetic moments are μ(68\mu( ^{68}Cug^{g}, Iπ^{\pi} = 1+^+) = +2.48(2)(7)μN\mu_{N} ; μ(68\mu(^{68}Cum^{m}, Iπ^{\pi}=6^{-}) = +1.24(4)(6)μN\mu_{N} and μ(70\mu(^{70}Cum2^{m_{2}}, Iπ^{\pi}=1+^{+}) = +1.86(4)(6)μN\mu_{N} ; μ(70\mu(^{70}Cug^{g}, Iπ^{\pi}=6^{-}) = +1.50(7)(8)μN\mu_{N}. The results of the scans analysis point out on existence of a new isomer in 70^{70}Cum1^{m_{1}}. It's deduced magnetic moment is (-)3.50(7)(11)μN\mu_{N} that is in a good agreement with Iπ^{\pi}=3^{-} assignment. The method of in-source atomic spectroscopy, as well as the analysis of the obtained data, is described. The results are discussed in terms of single-particle configurations coupled to the 68^{68}Ni core

    Scaling analysis of electron transport through metal-semiconducting carbon nanotube interfaces: Evolution from the molecular limit to the bulk limit

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    We present a scaling analysis of electronic and transport properties of metal-semiconducting carbon nanotube interfaces as a function of the nanotube length within the coherent transport regime, which takes fully into account atomic-scale electronic structure and three-dimensional electrostatics of the metal-nanotube interface using a real-space Green's function based self-consistent tight-binding theory. As the first example, we examine devices formed by attaching finite-size single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWNT) to both high- and low- work function metallic electrodes through the dangling bonds at the end. We analyze the nature of Schottky barrier formation at the metal-nanotube interface by examining the electrostatics, the band lineup and the conductance of the metal-SWNT molecule-metal junction as a function of the SWNT molecule length and metal-SWNT coupling strength. We show that the confined cylindrical geometry and the atomistic nature of electronic processes across the metal-SWNT interface leads to a different physical picture of band alignment from that of the planar metal-semiconductor interface. We analyze the temperature and length dependence of the conductance of the SWNT junctions, which shows a transition from tunneling- to thermal activation-dominated transport with increasing nanotube length. The temperature dependence of the conductance is much weaker than that of the planar metal-semiconductor interface due to the finite number of conduction channels within the SWNT junctions. We find that the current-voltage characteristics of the metal-SWNT molecule-metal junctions are sensitive to models of the potential response to the applied source/drain bias voltages.Comment: Minor revision to appear in Phys. Rev. B. Color figures available in the online PRB version or upon request to: [email protected]

    Mathematical models as research data via flexiformal theory graphs

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    Mathematical modeling and simulation (MMS) has now been established as an essential part of the scientific work in many disciplines. It is common to categorize the involved numerical data and to some extent the corresponding scientific software as research data. But both have their origin in mathematical models, therefore any holistic approach to research data in MMS should cover all three aspects: data, software, and models. While the problems of classifying, archiving and making accessible are largely solved for data and first frameworks and systems are emerging for software, the question of how to deal with mathematical models is completely open. In this paper we propose a solution -- to cover all aspects of mathematical models: the underlying mathematical knowledge, the equations, boundary conditions, numeric approximations, and documents in a flexi\-formal framework, which has enough structure to support the various uses of models in scientific and technology workflows. Concretely we propose to use the OMDoc/MMT framework to formalize mathematical models and show the adequacy of this approach by modeling a simple, but non-trivial model: van Roosbroeck's drift-diffusion model for one-dimensional devices. This formalization -- and future extensions -- allows us to support the modeler by e.g. flexibly composing models, visualizing Model Pathway Diagrams, and annotating model equations in documents as induced from the formalized documents by flattening. This directly solves some of the problems in treating MMS as "research data'' and opens the way towards more MKM services for models
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