1,554 research outputs found
Spin Gating of Mesoscopic Devices
Inefficient screening of electric fields in nanoconductors makes electric
manipulation of electronic transport in nanodevices possible. Accordingly,
electrostatic (charge) gating is routinely used to affect and control the
Coulomb electrostatics and quantum interference in modern nanodevices. Besides
their charge, another (quantum mechanical) property of electrons - their spin -
is at the heart of modern spintronics, a term implying that a number of
magnetic and electrical properties of small systems are simultaneously
harvested for device applications. In this review the possibility to achieve
"spin gating" of mesoscopic devices, i.e. the possibility of an external spin
control of the electronic properties of nanodevices is discussed. Rather than
the Coulomb interaction, which is responsible for electric-charge gating, we
consider two other mechanisms for spin gating. These are on the one hand the
magnetic exchange interaction in magnetic devices and on the other hand the
spin-orbit coupling ("Rashba effect"), which is prominent in low dimensional
conductors. A number of different phenomena demonstrating the spin gating
phenomenon will be discussed, including the spintro-mechanics of magnetic
shuttling, Rashba spin splitting, and spin-gated weak superconductivity.Comment: Submitted to a special issue of "Synthetic Metals" to appear in March
201
Nonlinear conductance of nanowires - A signature of Luttinger liquid effects?
We analyze recent measurements of the room temperature current-voltage
characteristics of gold nanowires, whose zero current conductance is quantized
in units of . A faster than linear increase of current with voltage was
observed at low voltages beginning from V. We analyze the nonlinear
behavior in terms of a dynamic Coulomb blockade of conducting modes and show
that it may be explained as a Luttinger-liquid effect.Comment: 13 pages, latex with supplied stylefile, 3 figures in eps format,
submitted to Superlattices and Microstructure
Giant conductance oscillations in a normal mesoscopic ring induced by an SNS Josephson current
A theoretical explanation of giant conductance oscillations observed in
normal mesoscopic rings with superconducting ``mirrors" is proposed. The effect
is due to resonant tuning of Andreev levels to the Fermi level, which enhances
the transparency of the system to the normal current. The mechanism is
demonstrated for a one-dimensional model system.Comment: 10 pages, RevTeX, 3 fig. available upon request, Appl. Phys. Report
94-
Rashba splitting of Cooper pairs
We investigate theoretically the properties of a weak link between two
superconducting leads, which has the form of a non-superconducting nanowire
with a strong Rashba spin-orbit coupling caused by an electric field. In the
Coulomb blockade regime of single-electron tunneling, we find that such a weak
link acts as a "spin splitter" of the spin states of Cooper pairs tunneling
through the link, to an extent that depends on the direction of the electric
field. We show that the Josephson current is sensitive to interference between
the resulting two transmission channels, one where the spins of both members of
a Cooper pair are preserved and one where they are both flipped. As a result,
the current is a periodic function of the strength of the spin-orbit
interaction and of the bending angle of the nanowire (when mechanically bent);
an identical effect appears due to strain-induced spin-orbit coupling. In
contrast, no spin-orbit induced interference effect can influence the current
through a single weak link connecting two normal metals.Comment: 5 pages 3 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1306.512
Suppression of stochastic fluctuations of suspended nanowires by temperature-induced single-electron tunnelling
We investigate theoretically the electromechanical properties of freely
suspended nanowires that are in tunnelling contact with the tip of a scanning
tunnelling microscope (STM) and two supporting metallic leads. The aim of our
analysis is to characterize the fluctuations of the dynamical variables of the
nanowire when a temperature drop is mantained between the STM tip and the
leads, which are all assumed to be electrically grounded. By solving a quantum
master equation that describes the coupled dynamics of electronic and
mechanical degrees of freedom we find that the stationary state of the
mechanical oscillator has a Gaussian character, but that the amplitude of its
root-mean square center-of-mass fluctuations is smaller than would be expected
if the system were coupled only to the leads at thermal equilibrium.Comment: Published versio
Rashba proximity states in superconducting tunnel junctions
We consider a new kind of superconducting proximity effect created by the
tunneling of "spin split" Cooper pairs between two conventional superconductors
connected by a normal conductor containing a quantum dot. The difference
compared to the usual superconducting proximity effect is that the spin states
of the tunneling Cooper pairs are split into singlet and triplet components by
the electron spin-orbit coupling, which is assumed to be active in the normal
conductor only. We demonstrate that the supercurrent carried by the spin-split
Cooper pairs can be manipulated both mechanically and electrically for
strengths of the spin-orbit coupling that can realistically be achieved by
electrostatic gates.Comment: Accepted for publication in Fiz. Niz. Temp./Low Temp. Phys. vol. 44,
no. 6, 2018. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1709.0802
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