399 research outputs found
Conductance statistics in small insulating GaAs:Si wires at low temperature. II. Experimental study
We have observed reproducible conductance fluctuations at low temperature in
a small GaAs:Si wire driven across the Anderson transition by the application
of a gate voltage. We analyse quantitatively the log-normal conductance
statistics in terms of truncated quantum fluctuations. Quantum fluctuations due
to small changes of the electron energy (controlled by the gate voltage) cannot
develop fully due to identified geometrical fluctuations of the resistor
network describing the hopping through the sample.
The evolution of the fluctuations versus electron energy and magnetic field
shows that the fluctuations are non-ergodic, except in the critical insulating
region of the Anderson transition, where the localization length is larger than
the distance between Si impurities.
The mean magnetoconductance is in good accordance with simulations based on
the Forward-Directed-Paths analysis, i.e. it saturates to as decreases over orders of
magnitude in the strongly localized regime.Comment: Email contact: [email protected]
Scanning microSQUID Force Microscope
A novel scanning probe technique is presented: Scanning microSQUID Force
microscopy (SSFM). The instrument features independent topographic and magnetic
imaging. The SSFM operates in a dilution refrigerator in cryogenic vacuum.
Sample and probe can be cooled to 0.45 K. The probe consists of a microSQUID
placed at the edge of a silicon chip attached to a quartz tuning fork. A
topographic vertical resolution of 0.02 micrometer is demonstrated and magnetic
flux as weak as is resolved with a 1 micrometer diameter
microSQUID loop.Comment: submitted to Review of Scientific Instrument
Resonant photon absorption in the low spin molecule V15
We report the first study of the micro-SQUID response of a molecular system
to electromagnetic radiation. The advantages of our micro-SQUID technique in
respect to pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) techniques consist in
the possibility to perform time-resolved experiments (below 1 ns) on
submicrometer sizes samples (about 1000 spins) at low temperature (below 100
mK).
Resonant photon absorption in the GHz range was observed via low temperature
micro-SQUID magnetization measurements of the spin ground state S = 1/2 of the
molecular complex V15. The line-width essentially results from intra-molecular
hyperfine interaction. The results point out that observing Rabi oscillations
in molecular nanomagnets requires well isolated low spin systems and high
radiation power. Our first results open the way for time-resolved observations
of quantum superposition of spin-up and spin-down states in SMMs.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Landau Zener method to study quantum phase interference of Fe8 molecular nanomagnets
We present details about an experimental method based on the Landau Zener
model which allows to measure very small tunnel splittings in
molecular clusters Fe8. The measurements are performed with an array of
micro-SQUIDs. The observed oscillations of Delta as a function of the magnetic
field applied along the hard anisotropy axis are explained in terms of
topological quantum interference of two tunnel paths of opposite windings.
Transitions between M = -S and (S - n), with n even or odd, revealed a parity
(symmetry) effect which is analogous to the suppression of tunneling predicted
for half integer spins. This observation is the first direct evidence of the
topological part of the quantum spin phase (Berry phase) in a magnetic system.
The influence of intermolecular dipole interactions on the measured tunnel
splittings are shown.Comment: 6 pages, 14 figures, conference proceedings of MMM 1999, San Jose,
15-18 Nov., session number CD-0
Single nanoparticle measurement techniques
Various single particle measuring techniques are briefly reviewed and the
basic concepts of a new micro-SQUID technique are discussed. It allows
measurements of the magnetization reversal of single nanometer-sized particles
at low temperature. The influence of the measuring technique on the system of
interest is discussed.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures, conference proceedings of MMM 1999, San Jose,
15-18 Nov., session number BE-0
Measurements of flux dependent screening in Aharonov-Bohm rings
In order to investigate the effect of electronic phase coherence on screening
we have measured the flux dependent polarizability of isolated mesoscopic rings
at 350 MHz. At low temperature (below 100 mK) both non-dissipative and
dissipative parts of the polarizability exhibit flux oscillations with a period
of half a flux quantum in a ring. The sign and amplitude of the effect are in
good agreement with recent theoretical predictions. The observed positive
magneto-polarizability corresponds to an enhancement of screening when time
reversal symmetry is broken. The effect of electronic density and temperature
are also measured.Comment: 4 pages, revtex, 4 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Interplay among spin, orbital effects and localization in a GaAs two-dimensional electron gas in a strong in-plane magnetic field
The magnetoresistance of a low carrier density, disordered GaAs based
two-dimensional (2D) electron gas has been measured in parallel magnetic fields
up to 32 T. The feature in the resistance associated with the complete spin
polarization of the carriers shifts down by more than 20 T as the electron
density is reduced, consistent with recent theories taking into account the
enhancement of the electron-electron interactions at low densities.
Nevertheless, the magnetic field for complete polarization, Bp, remains 2-3
times smaller than predicted for a disorder free system. We show, in particular
by studying the temperature dependance of Bp to probe the effective size of the
Fermi sea, that localization plays an important role in determining the spin
polarization of a 2D electron gas.Comment: Published in the Physical Review
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