24 research outputs found

    Optical conversion of pure spin currents in hybrid molecular devices

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    Carbon-based molecules offer unparalleled potential for THz and optical devices controlled by pure spin currents: a low-dissipation flow of electronic spins with no net charge displacement. However, the research so far has been focused on the electrical conversion of the spin imbalance, where molecular materials are used to mimic their crystalline counterparts. Here, we use spin currents to access the molecular dynamics and optical properties of a fullerene layer. The spin mixing conductance across Py/C60 interfaces is increased by 10% (5 × 1018 m−2) under optical irradiation. Measurements show up to a 30% higher light absorbance and a factor of 2 larger photoemission during spin pumping. We also observe a 0.15 THz slowdown and a narrowing of the vibrational peaks. The effects are attributed to changes in the non-radiative damping and energy transfer. This opens new research paths in hybrid magneto-molecular optoelectronics, and the optical detection of spin physics in these materials

    Observation of a molecular muonium polaron and its application to probing magnetic and electronic states

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    We thank the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC UK) for support via Grants No. EP/M000923/1, No. EP/K036408/1, No. EP/I004483/1, No. EP/S031081/1, and No. EP/S030263/1. L.L., S.S., D.J. and G.T. acknowledge also support from STFC-ISIS Neutron and Muon Source and Ada Lovelace Centre at STFC-SCD. We acknowledge use of the ARCHER (via the U.K. Car–Parrinello Consortium, EP/P022618/1 and EP/P022189/2), U.K. Materials and Molecular Modelling Hub (EP/P020194/1), and STFC Scientific Computing Department's SCARF HCP facilities. We acknowledge support from the Henry Royce Institute. This work was also supported financially through the EPSRC Grant Nos. EP/ P022464/1, and EP/R00661X/1.Muonium is a combination of first- and second-generation matter formed by the electrostatic interaction between an electron and an antimuon (ÎŒ+). Although a well-known physical system, their ability to form collective excitations in molecules had not been observed. Here, we give evidence for the detection of a muonium state that propagates in a molecular semiconductor lattice via thermally activated dynamics: a muonium polaron. By measuring the temperature dependence of the depolarization of the muonium state in C60, we observe a thermal narrowing of the hyperfine distribution that we attribute to the dynamics of the muonium between molecular sites. As a result of the time scale for muonium decay, the energies involved, charge and spin selectivity, this quasiparticle is a widely applicable experimental tool. It is an excellent probe of emerging electronic, dynamic, and magnetic states at interfaces and in low dimensional systems, where direct spatial probing is an experimental challenge owing to the buried interface, nanoscale elements providing the functionality localization and small magnitude of the effects.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe

    Reversible spin storage in metal oxide—fullerene heterojunctions

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    We show that hybrid MnOx/C60 heterojunctions can be used to design a storage device for spin-polarized charge: a spin capacitor. Hybridization at the carbon-metal oxide interface leads to spin-polarized charge trapping after an applied voltage or photocurrent. Strong electronic structure changes, including a 1-eV energy shift and spin polarization in the C60 lowest unoccupied molecular orbital, are then revealed by x-ray absorption spectroscopy, in agreement with density functional theory simulations. Muon spin spectroscopy measurements give further independent evidence of local spin ordering and magnetic moments optically/electronically stored at the heterojunctions. These spin-polarized states dissipate when shorting the electrodes. The spin storage decay time is controlled by magnetic ordering at the interface, leading to coherence times of seconds to hours even at room temperature

    Namibia regains Walvis Bay at last

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    Data on spin-singlet to triplet Cooper pair converter interface

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    This dataset contains the measurements reported in the manuscript "Spin-singlet to triplet Cooper pair converter interface". In this study, we fuse magnetism and superconductivity in a system where spin-ordering and diffusion of Cooper pairs are achieved at a non-intrinsically magnetic nor superconducting Cu/C60 interface. Electron transport, magnetometry and low-energy muon spin rotation are used to probe time-reversal symmetry breaking in these structures
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