37 research outputs found
Voltage-Controlled Spin Selection in a Magnetic Resonant Tunnelling Diode
We have fabricated all II-VI semiconductor resonant tunneling diodes based on
the (Zn,Mn,Be)Se material system, containing dilute magnetic material in the
quantum well, and studied their current-voltage characteristics. When subjected
to an external magnetic field the resulting spin splitting of the levels in the
quantum well leads to a splitting of the transmission resonance into two
separate peaks. This is interpreted as evidence of tunneling transport through
spin polarized levels, and could be the first step towards a voltage controlled
spin filter.Comment: To be published in Phys. Rev. Let
Self Assembled II-VI Magnetic Quantum Dot as a Voltage-Controlled Spin-Filter
A key element in the emergence of a full spintronics technology is the
development of voltage controlled spin filters to selectively inject carriers
of desired spin into semiconductors. We previously demonstrated a prototype of
such a device using a II-VI dilute-magnetic semiconductor quantum well which,
however, still required an external magnetic field to generate the level
splitting. Recent theory suggests that spin selection may be achievable in
II-VI paramagnetic semiconductors without external magnetic field through local
carrier mediated ferromagnetic interactions. We present the first experimental
observation of such an effect using non-magnetic CdSe self-assembled quantum
dots in a paramagnetic (Zn,Be,Mn)Se barrier.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
A portable MBE system for in situ X-Ray investigations at synchrotron beamlines
A portable synchrotron MBE system is designed and applied for in situ
investigations. The growth chamber is equipped with all the standard MBE
components such as effusion cells with shutters, main shutter, cooling shroud,
manipulator, RHEED setup and pressure gauges. The characteristic feature of the
system is the beryllium windows which are used for in situ x-ray measurements.
An UHV sample transfer case allows in-vacuo transfer of samples prepared
elsewhere. We describe the system design and demonstrate it's performance by
investigating the annealing process of buried InGaAs self organized quantum
dots