196 research outputs found
Observation of the Magneto-Optic Voigt Effect in a Paramagnetic Diamond Membrane
The magneto-optic Voigt effect is observed in a synthetic diamond membrane
with a substitutional nitrogen defect concentration in the order of 200 ppm and
a nitrogen-vacancy defect sub-ensemble generated through neutron irradiation
and annealing. The measured polarisation rotation in the reflected light is
observed to be quadratically proportional to the applied magnetic field and to
the incident reflection angle. Additionally, it is observed to be modifiable by
illuminating the diamond with a 532 nm laser. Spectral analysis of the
reflected light under 532 nm illumination shows a slow narrowing of the
spectral distribution, indicating a small increase in the overall
magnetisation, as opposed to magnetisation degradation caused by heating.
Further analysis of the optical power dependence suggest this may be related to
a shift in the spin ensembles charge state equilibrium and, by extension, the
resulting ensemble magnetisation.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Magnetization switching in ferromagnets by adsorbed chiral molecules without current or external magnetic field
Ferromagnets are commonly magnetized by either external magnetic fields or spin polarized currents. The manipulation of magnetization by spin-current occurs through the spin-transfer-torque effect, which is applied, for example, in modern magnetoresistive random access memory. However, the current density required for the spin-transfer torque is of the order of 1 × 106 A·cm−2, or about 1 × 1025 electrons s−1 cm−2. This relatively high current density significantly affects the devices’ structure and performance. Here we demonstrate magnetization switching of ferromagnetic thin layers that is induced solely by adsorption of chiral molecules. In this case, about 1013 electrons per cm2 are sufficient to induce magnetization reversal. The direction of the magnetization depends on the handedness of the adsorbed chiral molecules. Local magnetization switching is achieved by adsorbing a chiral self-assembled molecular monolayer on a gold-coated ferromagnetic layer with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy. These results present a simple low-power magnetization mechanism when operating at ambient conditions
An Efficient Large-Area Grating Coupler for Surface Plasmon Polaritons
We report the design, fabrication and characterization of a periodic grating
of shallow rectangular grooves in a metallic film with the goal of maximizing
the coupling efficiency of an extended plane wave (PW) of visible or
near-infrared light into a single surface plasmon polariton (SPP) mode on a
flat metal surface. A PW-to-SPP power conversion factor > 45 % is demonstrated
at a wavelength of 780 nm, which exceeds by an order of magnitude the
experimental performance of SPP grating couplers reported to date at any
wavelength. Conversion efficiency is maximized by matching the dissipative SPP
losses along the grating surface to the local coupling strength. This critical
coupling condition is experimentally achieved by tailoring the groove depth and
width using a focused ion beam.Comment: The final publication is available at http://www.springerlink.com.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11468-011-9303-
Efficient unidirectional nanoslit couplers for surface plasmons
Plasmonics is based on surface plasmon polariton (SPP) modes which can be
laterally confined below the diffraction limit, thereby enabling ultracompact
optical components. In order to exploit this potential, the fundamental
bottleneck of poor light-SPP coupling must be overcome. In established SPP
sources (using prism, grating} or nanodefect coupling) incident light is a
source of noise for the SPP, unless the illumination occurs away from the
region of interest, increasing the system size and weakening the SPP intensity.
Back-side illumination of subwavelength apertures in optically thick metal
films eliminates this problem but does not ensure a unique propagation
direction for the SPP. We propose a novel back-side slit-illumination method
based on drilling a periodic array of indentations at one side of the slit. We
demonstrate that the SPP running in the array direction can be suppressed, and
the one propagating in the opposite direction enhanced, providing localized
unidirectional SPP launching.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Charge stability and charge-state-based spin readout of shallow nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond
Spin-based applications of the negatively charged nitrogen-vacancy (NV)
center in diamonds require efficient spin readout. One approach is the
spin-to-charge conversion (SCC), relying on mapping the spin states onto the
neutral (NV) and negative (NV) charge states followed by a subsequent
charge readout. With high charge-state stability, SCC enables extended
measurement times, increasing precision and minimizing noise in the readout
compared to the commonly used fluorescence detection. Nano-scale sensing
applications, however, require shallow NV centers within a few \si{\nano
\meter} distance from the surface where surface related effects might degrade
the NV charge state. In this article, we investigate the charge state
initialization and stability of single NV centers implanted \approx
\SI{5}{\nano \meter} below the surface of a flat diamond plate. We demonstrate
the SCC protocol on four shallow NV centers suitable for nano-scale sensing,
obtaining a reduced readout noise of 5--6 times the spin-projection noise
limit. We investigate the general applicability of SCC for shallow NV centers
and observe a correlation between NV charge-state stability and readout noise.
Coating the diamond with glycerol improves both charge initialization and
stability. Our results reveal the influence of the surface-related charge
environment on the NV charge properties and motivate further investigations to
functionalize the diamond surface with glycerol or other materials for
charge-state stabilization and efficient spin-state readout of shallow NV
centers suitable for nano-scale sensing.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Ice-Tethered Profiler observations of the double-diffusive staircase in the Canada Basin thermocline
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2008. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Geophysical Research 113 (2008): C00A02, doi:10.1029/2008JC004829.Six Ice-Tethered Profilers (ITP), deployed in the central Canada Basin of the Arctic Ocean between 2004 and 2007, have provided detailed potential temperature and salinity measurements of a double-diffusive staircase at about 200–300 m depth. Individual layers in the staircase are of order 1 m in vertical height but appear to extend horizontally for hundreds of kilometers, with along-layer gradients of temperature and salinity tightly related. On the basis of laboratory-derived double-diffusive flux laws, estimated vertical heat fluxes through the staircase are in the range 0.05–0.3 W m−2, only about one tenth of the estimated mean surface mixed layer heat flux to the sea ice. It is thus concluded that the vertical transport of heat from the Atlantic Water in the central basin is unlikely to have a significant impact to the Canada Basin ocean surface heat budget. Icebreaker conductivity-temperature-depth data from the Beaufort Gyre Freshwater Experiment show that the staircase is absent at the basin periphery. Turbulent mixing that presumably disrupts the staircase might drive greater flux from the Atlantic Water at the basin boundaries and possibly dominate the regionally averaged heat flux.Funding for construction and deployment
of the prototype ITPs was provided by the National Science Foundation
Oceanographic Technology and Interdisciplinary Coordination (OTIC)
Program and Office of Polar Programs (OPP) under grant OCE-0324233.
Continued support for the ITP field program and data analysis has been
provided by the OPP Arctic Sciences Section under awards ARC-0519899,
ARC-0631951, ARC-0713837, and internal WHOI funding
Graphene-protected copper and silver plasmonics.
Plasmonics has established itself as a branch of physics which promises to revolutionize data processing, improve photovoltaics, and increase sensitivity of bio-detection. A widespread use of plasmonic devices is notably hindered by high losses and the absence of stable and inexpensive metal films suitable for plasmonic applications. To this end, there has been a continuous search for alternative plasmonic materials that are also compatible with complementary metal oxide semiconductor technology. Here we show that copper and silver protected by graphene are viable candidates. Copper films covered with one to a few graphene layers show excellent plasmonic characteristics. They can be used to fabricate plasmonic devices and survive for at least a year, even in wet and corroding conditions. As a proof of concept, we use the graphene-protected copper to demonstrate dielectric loaded plasmonic waveguides and test sensitivity of surface plasmon resonances. Our results are likely to initiate wide use of graphene-protected plasmonics.SAIT GRO Program and EPSRC grant EP/K011022/1. Y.-J. Kim was supported by the Global Research Laboratory Program (2011-0021972) of the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology, Korea. The support of the Graphene Flagship project is acknowledged
Graphene-protected copper and silver plasmonics
Plasmonics has established itself as a branch of physics which promises to
revolutionize data processing, improve photovoltaics, increase sensitivity of
bio-detection. A widespread use of plasmonic devices is notably hindered (in
addition to high losses) by the absence of stable and inexpensive metal films
suitable for plasmonic applications. This may seem surprising given the number
of metal compounds to choose from. Unfortunately, most of them either exhibit a
strong damping of surface plasmons or easily oxidize and corrode. To this end,
there has been continuous search for alternative plasmonic materials that are,
unlike gold, the current metal of choice in plasmonics, compatible with
complementary metal oxide semiconductor technology. Here we show that copper
and silver protected by graphene are viable candidates. Copper films covered
with one to a few graphene layers show excellent plasmonics characteristics
surpassing those of gold films. They can be used to fabricate plasmonic devices
and survive for at least a year, even in wet and corroding conditions. As a
proof of concept, we use the graphene-protected copper to demonstrate
dielectric loaded plasmonic waveguides and test sensitivity of surface plasmon
resonances. Our results are likely to initiate a wide use of graphene-protected
plasmonics.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figure
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