782 research outputs found
Velocity of domain-wall motion induced by electrical current in a ferromagnetic semiconductor (Ga,Mn)As
Current-induced domain-wall motion with velocity spanning over five orders of
magnitude up to 22 m/s has been observed by magneto-optical Kerr effect in
(Ga,Mn)As with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy. The data are employed to
verify theories of spin-transfer by the Slonczewski-like mechanism as well as
by the torque resulting from spin-flip transitions in the domain-wall region.
Evidence for domain-wall creep at low currents is found.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Current-driven Magnetization Reversal in a Ferromagnetic Semiconductor (Ga,Mn)As/GaAs/(Ga,Mn)As Tunnel Junction
Current-driven magnetization reversal in a ferromagnetic semiconductor based
(Ga,Mn)As/GaAs/(Ga,Mn)As magnetic tunnel junction is demonstrated at 30 K.
Magnetoresistance measurements combined with current pulse application on a
rectangular 1.5 x 0.3 um^2 device revealed that magnetization switching occurs
at low critical current densities of 1.1 - 2.2 x 10^5 A/cm^2 despite the
presence of spin-orbit interaction in the p-type semiconductor system. Possible
mechanisms responsible for the effect are discussed.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figure
Domain-wall resistance in ferromagnetic (Ga,Mn)As
A series of microstructures designed to pin domain-walls (DWs) in (Ga,Mn)As
with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy has been employed to determine extrinsic
and intrinsic contributions to DW resistance. The former is explained
quantitatively as resulting from a polarity change in the Hall electric field
at DW. The latter is one order of magnitude greater than a term brought about
by anisotropic magnetoresistance and is shown to be consistent with
disorder-induced misstracing of the carrier spins subject to spatially varying
magnetization
Anomalous Hall effect in field-effect structures of (Ga,Mn)As
The anomalous Hall effect in metal-insulator-semiconductor structures having
thin (Ga,Mn)As layers as a channel has been studied in a wide range of Mn and
hole densities changed by the gate electric field. Strong and unanticipated
temperature dependence, including a change of sign, of the anomalous Hall
conductance has been found in samples with the highest Curie
temperatures. For more disordered channels, the scaling relation between
and , similar to the one observed previously for
thicker samples, is recovered.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Correlated defects, metal-insulator transition, and magnetic order in ferromagnetic semiconductors
The effect of disorder on transport and magnetization in ferromagnetic III-V
semiconductors, in particular (Ga,Mn)As, is studied theoretically. We show that
Coulomb-induced correlations of the defect positions are crucial for the
transport and magnetic properties of these highly compensated materials. We
employ Monte Carlo simulations to obtain the correlated defect distributions.
Exact diagonalization gives reasonable results for the spectrum of valence-band
holes and the metal-insulator transition only for correlated disorder. Finally,
we show that the mean-field magnetization also depends crucially on defect
correlations.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX4, 5 figures include
Origin of ferromagnetism in (Zn,Co)O from magnetization and spin-dependent magnetoresistance
In order to elucidate the nature of ferromagnetic signatures observed in
(Zn,Co)O we have examined experimentally and theoretically magnetic properties
and spin-dependent quantum localization effects that control low-temperature
magnetoresistance. Our findings, together with a through structural
characterization, substantiate the model assigning spontaneous magnetization of
(Zn,Co)O to uncompensated spins at the surface of antiferromagnetic nanocrystal
of Co-rich wurtzite (Zn,Co)O. The model explains a large anisotropy observed in
both magnetization and magnetoresistance in terms of spin hamiltonian of Co
ions in the crystal field of the wurtzite lattice.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Anisotropic magnetoresistance of spin-orbit coupled carriers scattered from polarized magnetic impurities
Anisotropic magnetoresistance (AMR) is a relativistic magnetotransport
phenomenon arising from combined effects of spin-orbit coupling and broken
symmetry of a ferromagnetically ordered state of the system. In this work we
focus on one realization of the AMR in which spin-orbit coupling enters via
specific spin-textures on the carrier Fermi surfaces and ferromagnetism via
elastic scattering of carriers from polarized magnetic impurities. We report
detailed heuristic examination, using model spin-orbit coupled systems, of the
emergence of positive AMR (maximum resistivity for magnetization along
current), negative AMR (minimum resistivity for magnetization along current),
and of the crystalline AMR (resistivity depends on the absolute orientation of
the magnetization and current vectors with respect to the crystal axes)
components. We emphasize potential qualitative differences between pure
magnetic and combined electro-magnetic impurity potentials, between short-range
and long-range impurities, and between spin-1/2 and higher spin-state carriers.
Conclusions based on our heuristic analysis are supported by exact solutions to
the integral form of the Boltzmann transport equation in archetypical
two-dimensional electron systems with Rashba and Dresselhaus spin-orbit
interactions and in the three-dimensional spherical Kohn-Littinger model. We
include comments on the relation of our microscopic calculations to standard
phenomenology of the full angular dependence of the AMR, and on the relevance
of our study to realistic, two-dimensional conduction-band carrier systems and
to anisotropic transport in the valence band of diluted magnetic
semiconductors.Comment: 15 pages, Kohn-Littinger model adde
Reorientation Transition in Single-Domain (Ga,Mn)As
We demonstrate that the interplay of in-plane biaxial and uniaxial anisotropy
fields in (Ga,Mn)As results in a magnetization reorientation transition and an
anisotropic AC susceptibility which is fully consistent with a simple single
domain model. The uniaxial and biaxial anisotropy constants vary respectively
as the square and fourth power of the spontaneous magnetization across the
whole temperature range up to T_C. The weakening of the anisotropy at the
transition may be of technological importance for applications involving
thermally-assisted magnetization switching.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Spin-dependent tunneling in modulated structures of (Ga,Mn)As
A model of coherent tunneling, which combines multi-orbital tight-binding
approximation with Landauer-B\"uttiker formalism, is developed and applied to
all-semiconductor heterostructures containing (Ga,Mn)As ferromagnetic layers. A
comparison of theoretical predictions and experimental results on
spin-dependent Zener tunneling, tunneling magnetoresistance (TMR), and
anisotropic magnetoresistance (TAMR) is presented. The dependence of spin
current on carrier density, magnetization orientation, strain, voltage bias,
and spacer thickness is examined theoretically in order to optimize device
design and performance.Comment: 9 pages, 13 figures, submitted to PR
- …