93 research outputs found
2D superconductivity with strong spin-orbit interaction
We consider superconductivity confined at a two-dimensional interface with a
strong surface spin-orbit (Rashba) interaction. Some peculiar properties of
this system are investigated. In particular, we show that an in-plane Zeeman
field can induce a supercurrent flow.Comment: latex, 1 figure in ep
Electron-phonon renormalization in small Fermi energy systems
The puzzling features of recent photoemission data in cuprates have been
object of several analysis in order to identity the nature of the underlying
electron-boson interaction. In this paper we point out that many basilar
assumptions of the conventional analysis as expected to fail in small Fermi
energy systems when, as the cuprates, the Fermi energy is
comparable with the boson energy scale. We discuss in details the novel
features appearing in the self-energy of small Fermi energy systems and the
possible implications on the ARPES data in cuprates.Comment: 4 pages, 5 eps figures include
Graphene for spintronics: giant Rashba splitting due to hybridization with Au
Graphene in spintronics has so far primarily meant spin current leads of high
performance because the intrinsic spin-orbit coupling of its pi-electrons is
very weak. If a large spin-orbit coupling could be created by a proximity
effect, the material could also form active elements of a spintronic device
such as the Das-Datta spin field-effect transistor, however, metal interfaces
often compromise the band dispersion of massless Dirac fermions. Our
measurements show that Au intercalation at the graphene-Ni interface creates a
giant spin-orbit splitting (~100 meV) in the graphene Dirac cone up to the
Fermi energy. Photoelectron spectroscopy reveals hybridization with Au-5d
states as the source for the giant spin-orbit splitting. An ab initio model of
the system shows a Rashba-split dispersion with the analytically predicted
gapless band topology around the Dirac point of graphene and indicates that a
sharp graphene-Au interface at equilibrium distance will account for only ~10
meV spin-orbit splitting. The ab initio calculations suggest an enhancement due
to Au atoms that get closer to the graphene and do not violate the sublattice
symmetry.Comment: 16 pages (3 figures) + supplementary information 16 pages (14
figures
The Two Dimensional Kondo Model with Rashba Spin-Orbit Coupling
We investigate the effect that Rashba spin-orbit coupling has on the low
energy behaviour of a two dimensional magnetic impurity system. It is shown
that the Kondo effect, the screening of the magnetic impurity at temperatures T
< T_K, is robust against such spin-orbit coupling, despite the fact that the
spin of the conduction electrons is no longer a conserved quantity. A proposal
is made for how the spin-orbit coupling may change the value of the Kondo
temperature T_K in such systems and the prospects of measuring this change are
discussed. We conclude that many of the assumptions made in our analysis
invalidate our results as applied to recent experiments in semi-conductor
quantum dots but may apply to measurements made with magnetic atoms placed on
metallic surfaces.Comment: 22 pages, 1 figure; reference update
Emergent Phenomena Induced by Spin-Orbit Coupling at Surfaces and Interfaces
Spin-orbit coupling (SOC) describes the relativistic interaction between the
spin and momentum degrees of freedom of electrons, and is central to the rich
phenomena observed in condensed matter systems. In recent years, new phases of
matter have emerged from the interplay between SOC and low dimensionality, such
as chiral spin textures and spin-polarized surface and interface states. These
low-dimensional SOC-based realizations are typically robust and can be
exploited at room temperature. Here we discuss SOC as a means of producing such
fundamentally new physical phenomena in thin films and heterostructures. We put
into context the technological promise of these material classes for developing
spin-based device applications at room temperature
An angle-resolved photoemission spectral function analysis of the electron doped cuprate Nd_1.85Ce_0.15CuO_4
Using methods made possible by recent advances in photoemission technology,
we perform an indepth line-shape analysis of the angle-resolved photoemission
spectra of the electron doped (n-type) cuprate superconductor
Nd_1.85Ce_0.15CuO_4. Unlike for the p-type materials, we only observe weak mass
renormalizations near 50-70 meV. This may be indicative of smaller
electron-phonon coupling or due to the masking effects of other interactions
that make the electron-phonon coupling harder to detect. This latter scenario
may suggest limitations of the spectral function analysis in extracting
electronic self-energies when some of the interactions are highly momentum
dependent.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Superconducting 2D system with lifted spin degeneracy: Mixed singlet-triplet state
Motivated by recent experimental findings, we have developed a theory of the
superconducting state for 2D metals without inversion symmetry modeling the
geometry of a surface superconducting layer in a field-effect-transistor or
near the boundary doped by adsorbed ions. In such systems the two-fold spin
degeneracy is lifted by spin-orbit interaction, and singlet and triplet
pairings are mixed in the wave function of the Cooper pairs. As a result, spin
magnetic susceptibility becomes anisotropic and Knight shift retains finite and
rather high value at T=0.Comment: 5 pages, no figure
Twisted exchange interaction between localized spins embedded in a one- or two-dimensional electron gas with Rashba spin-orbit coupling
We study theoretically the Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida (RKKY) interaction
in one- and two-dimensions in presence of a Rashba spin-orbit (SO) coupling. We
show that rotation of the spin of conduction electrons due to SO coupling
causes a twisted RKKY interaction between localized spins which consists of
three different terms: Heisenberg, Dzyaloshinsky-Moriya, and Ising
interactions. We also show that the effective spin Hamiltonian reduces to the
usual RKKY interaction Hamiltonian in the twisted spin space where the spin
quantization axis of one localized spin is rotated.Comment: 4pages, no figur
Discovery (theoretical prediction and experimental observation) of a large-gap topological-insulator class with spin-polarized single-Dirac-cone on the surface
Recent theories and experiments have suggested that strong spin-orbit
coupling effects in certain band insulators can give rise to a new phase of
quantum matter, the so-called topological insulator, which can show macroscopic
entanglement effects. Such systems feature two-dimensional surface states whose
electrodynamic properties are described not by the conventional Maxwell
equations but rather by an attached axion field, originally proposed to
describe strongly interacting particles. It has been proposed that a
topological insulator with a single spin-textured Dirac cone interfaced with a
superconductor can form the most elementary unit for performing fault-tolerant
quantum computation. Here we present an angle-resolved photoemission
spectroscopy study and first-principle theoretical calculation-predictions that
reveal the first observation of such a topological state of matter featuring a
single-surface-Dirac-cone realized in the naturally occurring BiSe
class of materials. Our results, supported by our theoretical predictions and
calculations, demonstrate that undoped compound of this class of materials can
serve as the parent matrix compound for the long-sought topological device
where in-plane surface carrier transport would have a purely quantum
topological origin. Our study further suggests that the undoped compound
reached via n-to-p doping should show topological transport phenomena even at
room temperature.Comment: 3 Figures, 18 pages, Submitted to NATURE PHYSICS in December 200
Quantum manipulation via atomic-scale magnetoelectric effects
Magnetoelectric effects at the atomic scale are demonstrated to afford unique
functionality. This is shown explicitly for a quantum corral defined by a wall
of magnetic atoms deposited on a metal surface where spin-orbit coupling is
observable. We show these magnetoelectric effects allow one to control the
properties of systems placed inside the corral as well as their electronic
signatures; they provide alternative tools for probing electronic properties at
the atomic scale
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