2,148 research outputs found

    Low-dimensional light-emitting transistor with tunable recombination zone

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    We present experimental and numerical studies of a light-emitting transistor comprising two quasi-lateral junctions between a two-dimensional electron and hole gas. These lithographically defined junctions are fabricated by etching of a modulation doped GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure. In this device electrons and holes can be directed to the same area by drain and gate voltages, defining a recombination zone tunable in size and position. It could therefore provide an architecture for probing low-dimensional devices by analysing the emitted light of the recombination zone.Comment: 12 Pages, to be published in Journal of Modern Optic

    Fast optical control of spin in semiconductor interfacial structures

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    We report on a picosecond-fast optical removal of spin polarization from a self-confined photo-carrier system at an undoped GaAs/AlGaAs interface possessing superior long-range and high-speed spin transport properties. We employed a modified resonant spin amplification technique with unequal intensities of subsequent pump pulses to experimentally distinguish the evolution of spin populations originating from different excitation laser pulses. We demonstrate that the density of spins, which is injected into the system by means of the optical orientation, can be controlled by reducing the electrostatic confinement of the system using an additional generation of photocarriers. It is also shown that the disturbed confinement recovers within hundreds of picoseconds after which spins can be again photo-injected into the system

    Fabrication and electrical transport properties of embedded graphite microwires in a diamond matrix

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    Micrometer width and nanometer thick wires with different shapes were produced \approx 3~\upmum below the surface of a diamond crystal using a microbeam of He+^+ ions with 1.8~MeV energy. Initial samples are amorphous and after annealing at T1475T\approx 1475~K, the wires crystallized into a graphite-like structures, according to confocal Raman spectroscopy measurements. The electrical resistivity at room temperature is only one order of magnitude larger than the in-plane resistivity of highly oriented pyrolytic bulk graphite and shows a small resistivity ratio(ρ(2K)/ρ(315K)1.275\rho(2{\rm K})/\rho(315{\rm K}) \approx 1.275). A small negative magnetoresistance below T=200T=200~K was measured and can be well understood taking spin-dependent scattering processes into account. The used method provides the means to design and produce millimeter to micrometer sized conducting circuits with arbitrary shape embedded in a diamond matrix.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, to be published in Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics (Feb. 2017

    Quantum gates using electronic and nuclear spins of Yb+^{+} in a magnetic field gradient

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    An efficient scheme is proposed to carry out gate operations on an array of trapped Yb+^+ ions, based on a previous proposal using both electronic and nuclear degrees of freedom in a magnetic field gradient. For this purpose we consider the Paschen-Back regime (strong magnetic field) and employ a high-field approximation in this treatment. We show the possibility to suppress the unwanted coupling between the electron spins by appropriately swapping states between electronic and nuclear spins. The feasibility of generating the required high magnetic field is discussed

    Edge spin accumulation in semiconductor two-dimensional hole gases

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    The controlled generation of localized spin densities is a key enabler of semiconductor spintronics In this work, we study spin Hall effect induced edge spin accumulation in a two-dimensional hole gas with strong spin orbit interactions. We argue that it is an intrinsic property, in the sense that it is independent of the strength of disorder scattering. We show numerically that the spin polarization near the edge induced by this mechanism can be large, and that it becomes larger and more strongly localized as the spin-orbit coupling strength increases, and is independent of the width of the conducting strip once this exceeds the elastic scattering mean-free-path. Our experiments in two-dimensional hole gas microdevices confirm this remarkable spin Hall effect phenomenology. Achieving comparable levels of spin polarization by external magnetic fields would require laboratory equipment whose physical dimensions and operating electrical currents are million times larger than those of our spin Hall effect devices.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
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