122 research outputs found

    Electrical transport in the ferromagnetic state of manganites: Small-polaron metallic conduction at low temperatures

    Full text link
    We report measurements of the resistivity in the ferromagnetic state of epitaxial thin films of La_{1-x}Ca_{x}MnO_{3} and the low temperature specific heat of a polycrystalline La_{0.8}Ca_{0.2}MnO_{3}. The resistivity below 100 K can be well fitted by \rho - \rho_{o} = E \omega_{s}/sinh^{2}(\hbar \omega_{s}/2k_{B}T) with \hbar \omega_{s}/k_{B} \simeq 100 K and E being a constant. Such behavior is consistent with small-polaron coherent motion which involves a relaxation due to a soft optical phonon mode. The specific heat data also suggest the existence of such a phonon mode. The present results thus provide evidence for small-polaron metallic conduction in the ferromagnetic state of manganites.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, submitted to PR

    Trapped Rainbow Techniques for Spectroscopy on a Chip and Fluorescence Enhancement

    Full text link
    We report on the experimental demonstration of the broadband "trapped rainbow" in the visible range using arrays of adiabatically tapered optical nano waveguides. Being a distinct case of the slow light phenomenon, the trapped rainbow effect could be applied to optical signal processing, and sensing in such applications as spectroscopy on a chip, and to providing enhanced light-matter interactions. As an example of the latter applications, we have fabricated a large area array of tapered nano-waveguides, which exhibit broadband "trapped rainbow" effect. Considerable fluorescence enhancement due to slow light behavior in the array has been observed.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, Published in Applied Physics

    Experimental observation of the trapped rainbow

    Get PDF
    We report on the first experimental demonstration of the broadband "trapped rainbow" in the visible frequency range using an adiabatically tapered waveguide. Being a distinct case of the slow light phenomenon, the trapped rainbow effect could be applied to optical computing and signal processing, and to providing enhanced light-matter interactions.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figur

    Gapped tunneling spectra in the normal state of Pr2x_{2-x}Cex_xCuO4_4

    Full text link
    We present tunneling data in the normal state of the electron doped cuprate superconductor Pr2x_{2-x}Cex_xCuO4_4 for three different values of the doping xx. The normal state is obtained by applying a magnetic field greater than the upper critical field, Hc2H_{c2} for T<TcT < T_c. We observe an anomalous normal state gap near the Fermi level. From our analysis of the tunneling data we conclude that this is a feature of the normal state density of states. We discuss possible reasons for the formation of this gap and its implications for the nature of the charge carriers in the normal and the superconducting states of cuprate superconductors.Comment: 7 pages ReVTeX, 11 figures files included, submitted to PR

    Properties of the ferrimagnetic double-perovskite A_{2}FeReO_{6} (A=Ba and Ca)

    Get PDF
    Ceramics of A_{2}FeReO_{6} double-perovskite have been prepared and studied for A=Ba and Ca. Ba_{2}FeReO_{6} has a cubic structure (Fm3m) with aa\approx 8.0854(1) \AA whereas Ca_{2}FeReO_{6} has a distorted monoclinic symmetry with a5.396(1)A˚,b5.522(1)A˚,c7.688(2)A˚a\approx 5.396(1) \AA, b\approx 5.522(1) \AA, c\approx 7.688(2) \AA and β=90.4(P21/n)\beta =90.4^{\circ} (P21/n). The barium compound is metallic from 5 K to 385 K, i.e. no metal-insulator transition has been seen up to 385 K, and the calcium compound is semiconducting from 5 K to 385 K. Magnetization measurements show a ferrimagnetic behavior for both materials, with T_{c}=315 K for Ba_{2}FeReO_{6} and above 385 K for Ca_{2}FeReO_{6}. A specific heat measurement on the barium compound gave an electron density of states at the Fermi level, N(E_{F}) equal to 6.1×1024eV1mole1\times 10^{24} eV^{-1}mole^{-1}. At 5 K, we observed a negative magnetoresistance of 10 % in a magnetic field of 5 T, but only for Ba_{2}FeReO_{6}. Electrical, thermal and magnetic properties are discussed and compared to the analogous compounds Sr_{2}Fe(Mo,Re)O_{6}.Comment: 5 pages REVTeX, 7 figures included, submitted to PR
    corecore