244 research outputs found
Point-contact tunneling involving low-dimensional spin-triplet superconductors
We modify and extend previous microscopic calculations of tunneling in
superconducting junctions based on a non-equilibrium Green function formalism
to include the case of spin-triplet pairing. We show that distinctive features
are present in the I-V characteristics of different kinds of junctions, in
particular when the effects of magnetic fields are taken into account, that
permit to identify the type of pairing. We discuss the relevance of these
results in the context of quasi one-dimensional organic superconductors like
(TMTSF)_2(PF_6) and layered compounds like Sr_2RuO_4.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Structure and magnetic properties of Co/CoO and Co/Si core-shell cluster assemblies prepared via gas-phase
Plasma-gas condensation cluster deposition systems have been introduced and applied for preparation of Co/CoO and Co/Si clusters assemblies. In Co/CoO cluster assemblies prepared by the single source PGC system with introduction of O-2 gas into the deposition chamber, fee Co cores are covered with NaCl type CoO shells, showing marked enhancement of unidirectional and uniaxial magnetic anisotropy and a clear cross-over phenomenon in the magnetic relaxation from the high temperature thermal regime to the low temperature quantum tunneling regime. In Co/Si cluster assemblies prepared by the double source PGC system, fee Co cores are also covered with amorphous Si rich shells, showing rather small magnetic coercivity. Since Co/CoO and Co/Si core-shell clusters are stable in ambient atmosphere, they will be used as building blocks for novel nano-structure-controlled materials. (c) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Magnetic-Field- and Temperature-Dependent Characteristics of Fe/Cu Granular Films Produced by Sputter- and Cluster-Beam-Deposition(Research in High Magnetic Fields)
The magnetoresistance (MR) and magnetization (M) have been measured as functions of temperature, T, and magnetic field, H, in sputter(SP)- and cluster-beam(CB)-deposited Fe_XCu_ alloys. The MR for the SP-deposited Fe_Cu_ film exhibits a maximum at around the Curie temperature (T_C=150 K) and increases rapidly below 100 K owing to a spin-glass transition. For the CB-deposited granular Fe-Cu films with low Fe content, the MR is also enhanced at low temperatures being attributable to a cluster-glass behavior of small fcc Fe clusters. At low temperatures, moreover, a T^ dependence is found for both MR and M versus T curves. For the SP-deposited Fe_Cu_ sample, the T^ coefficient of the MR roughly corresponds with that of the M. For the CB-deposited Fe_Cu_ sample, however, they are inconsistent each other. These results originate from different status of the Fe atoms : the Fe atoms are rather randomly dispersed in the Cu matrices in the SP-deposited sample, while they form clusters in the CB-deposited one
Formation and magnetic properties of Fe-Pt alloy clusters by plasma-gas condensation
Size-monodispersed FexPt1-x alloy clusters were synthesized using a plasma-gas-condensation technique which employs two separate elemental sputtering sources and a growth chamber. The composition of the alloy clusters was controlled by adjusting the ratio of the applied sputtering power. We found that high-temperature disordered fcc-FexPt1-x clusters whose mean diameters of 6-9 nm depend on the Ar gas flow ratio were formed for a wide average composition range (xapproximate to0.3-0.7), and the lattice constant of as-doposited clusters increases almost linearly with decreasing x, being extrapolated to the value of pure Pt metal. For Fe49Pt51 cluster-assembled films, high coercivity (8.8 kOe) was obtained by annealing at 600 degreesC within 10 min due to improved chemical ordering, although as-deposited cluster-assembled films have lower blocking temperatures than room temperature, and show a small coercivity value (similar to25 Oe) at room temperature due to intercluster magnetic interaction. (C) 2003 American Institute of Physics
Effects of O-2 gas on the size and structure of Cr clusters formed by plasma-gas-condensation
Cr clusters have been produced by a plasma-gas-condensation type cluster deposition apparatus, and studied using a time-of-flight mass spectrometer and a transmission electron microscope. The Cr clusters formed in high pressure inert (Ar and/or lie) gas atmosphere are of an A15-type structure. When an O-2. Ps is mixed with the inert gases in the source (sputtering) chamber, a bcc phase is formed together with Cr2O3. The O-2 gas introduction leads to an increase in the gas temperature of the source chamber probably due to release of the formation enthalpy of the oxide. The A15 phase is annealed by such excess heat and becomes the equilibrium bee phase. The sizes of bee clusters are smaller than those of the A15-clusters, probably due to the heterogeneous nucleation promoted by the oxide formation
Exchange anisotropy of monodispersed Co/CoO cluster assemblies
Monodispersed Co/CoO cluster assemblies with the mean cluster size of 13 nm have been prepared using a plasma-gas-condensation-type cluster beam deposition apparatus. The structural analysis and magnetic measurement indicate that the Co cluster is covered by an oxide shell composed of CoO. The effect of the oxygen gas flow rate during deposition and that of temperature on the coercivity and hysteresis loop shift induced by field cooling were measured. The effect of the CoO shell on the loop shift and the temperature dependence of the exchange anisotropy are discussed. The unidirectional anisotropy is negligible above 200 K for the present assemblies. This is ascribed to the rapid decrease of the anisotropy of the antiferromagnetic interfacial layers near the inter-face of the Co cores and CoO shells
Crystalline-Electric-Field Effect on the Resistivity of Ce-based Heavy Fermion Systems
The behavior of the resistivity of Ce-based heavy fermion systems is studied
using a 1/-expansion method a la Nagoya, where is the spin-orbital
degeneracy of f-electrons. The 1/-expansion is performed in terms of the
auxiliary particles, and a strict requirement of the local constraints is
fulfilled for each order of 1/N. The physical quantities can be calculated over
the entire temperature range by solving the coupled Dyson equations for the
Green functions self-consistently at each temperature. This 1/N-expansion
method is known to provide asymptotically exact results for the behavior of
physical quantities in both low- and high-energy regions when it is applied to
a single orbital periodic Anderson model (PAM). On the basis of a generalized
PAM including crystalline-electric-field splitting with a single conduction
band, the pressure dependence of the resistivity is calculated by
parameterizing the effect of pressure as the variation of the hybridization
parameter between the conduction electrons and f-electrons. The main result of
the present study is that the double-peak structure of the -dependence of
the resistivity is shown to merge into a single-peak structure with increasing
pressure.Comment: 37 pages, 22 figure
Electrical properties of oxide-coated metal (Co, Cr, Ti) cluster assemblies
Oxide-coated metal (Co, Cr and Ti) cluster assemblies whose mean cluster sizes are 8-13 nm have been fabricated by a plasma-gas-condensation type cluster beam deposition technique. With increasing oxygen gas flow rate R-O2, the oxide-coated metal cluster-assembled films exhibit a metal-nonmetal transition. In the metallic regime, the resistivity reveals In T dependence at low temperature due to weak localization of conduction electrons and/or electron-electron interactions in the disordered oxide-coated cluster-assembled films. The In T dependence still remains for the very thick oxide-coated metal-cluster-assembled films (the actual thickness t(c) = 2400 nm) which is clearly a three-dimensional system. This behavior can be interpreted by a low dimensionality of the three-dimensional oxide-coated cluster assemblies because of a porous cluster stacking and imperfect or non-uniform oxide shell
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