851 research outputs found
Electron-Hole Asymmetry in GdBaCo_{2}O_{5+x}: Evidence for Spin Blockade of Electron Transport in a Correlated Electron System
In RBaCo_{2}O_{5+x} compounds (R is rare earth) variability of the oxygen
content allows precise doping of CoO_2 planes with both types of charge
carriers. We study transport properties of doped GdBaCo_{2}O_{5+x} single
crystals and find a remarkable asymmetry in the behavior of holes and electrons
doped into a parent insulator GdBaCo_{2}O_{5.5}. Doping dependences of
resistivity, Hall response, and thermoelectric power reveal that the doped
holes greatly improve the conductivity, while the electron-doped samples always
remain poorly conducting. This doping asymmetry provides strong evidence for a
spin blockade of the electron transport in RBaCo_{2}O_{5+x}.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in PR
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Credit Supply, Homeownership and Mortgage Debt
We analyse the effect of credit supply on households' homeownership status and mortgage debt, as well as other variables relating to housing costs and home equity. We demonstrate that banking deregulation as enacted by the Interstate Banking and Branching Efficiency Act (IBBEA) together with states' autonomy to set the degree and timing of deregulation provides an exogenous shift in credit supply which shows variation across states and time. We use this variation to isolate the effect of credit supply from confounding factors which could simultaneously affect credit supply and demand. Using a rich individual-level panel covering the period 1996 to 2008, and controlling for individual and region-year fixed effects, we find that a shift from full regulation to full deregulation increases the probability of owning a home by one, and of having a mortgage by two percentage points. The deregulation observed between 1990 and 2005 can explain at least one fifth, and up to 45% of the increase in homeowneship and the share of households with mortgages. For observations residing in non-metropolitan areas, we also find significant effects of deregulation on the amount of mortgage debt, reported home values, monthly mortgage payments, and debt to value as well as debt to income ratios. Most of these effects are driven by young households, and by individuals with higher incomes. Our results inform on the causes of the rise in homeownership and mortgage debt in the 1990s and 2000s which have led up to the housing crisis in the late 2000s
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Homeownership and Unemployment Duration
We examine the effects of homeownership on individuals' unemployment durations in the USA. We take into account that an unemployment spell can terminate with a job or with a non-participation transition. The endogeneity of homeownership is addressed through the estimation of a full maximum likelihood function which jointly models the competing hazards and the probability of being a homeowner. Unobserved factors contributing to the probability of being a homeowner are allowed to be correlated with unobservable heterogeneity in the hazard rates. We find that unemployed homeowners are less likely to find a job than renters. The effect is small but statistically significant for most specifications. The effect is stronger for outright owners and weaker for mortgage holders. We also find that outright owners have a higher and mortgage holders a lower probability of exiting to non-participation than renters
Quantum oscillations in a topological insulator Bi_{1-x}Sb_{x}
We have studied transport and magnetic properties of Bi_{1-x}Sb_x, which is
believed to be a topological insulator - a new state of matter where an
insulating bulk supports an intrinsically metallic surface. In nominally
insulating Bi_{0.91}Sb_{0.09} crystals, we observed strong quantum oscillations
of the magnetization and the resistivity originating from a Fermi surface which
has a clear two-dimensional character. In addition, a three-dimensional Fermi
surface is found to coexist, which is possibly due to an unusual coupling of
the bulk to the surface. This finding demonstrates that quantum oscillations
can be a powerful tool to directly probe the novel electronic states in
topological insulators.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Additional Evidence for the Surface Origin of the Peculiar Angular-Dependent Magnetoresistance Oscillations Discovered in a Topological Insulator Bi_{1-x}Sb_{x}
We present detailed data on the unusual angular-dependent magnetoresistance
oscillation phenomenon recently discovered in a topological insulator
Bi_{0.91}Sb_{0.09}. Direct comparison of the data taken before and after
etching the sample surface gives compelling evidence that this phenomenon is
essentially originating from a surface state. The symmetry of the oscillations
suggests that it probably comes from the (111) plane, and obviously a new
mechanism, such as a coupling between the surface and the bulk states, is
responsible for this intriguing phenomenon in topological insulators.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, Proceedings manuscript for the 19th International
Conference on the Application of High Magnetic Fields in Semiconductor
Physics and Nanotechnology (HMF-19
Ising-like Spin Anisotropy and Competing Antiferromagnetic - Ferromagnetic Orders in GdBaCo_{2}O_{5.5} Single Crystals
In RBaCo_{2}O_{5+x} compounds (R is rare earth), a
ferromagnetic-antiferromagnetic competition is accompanied by a giant
magnetoresistance. We study the magnetization of detwinned GdBaCo_{2}O_{5.5}
single crystals, and find a remarkable uniaxial anisotropy of Co^{3+} spins
which is tightly linked with the chain oxygen ordering in GdO_{0.5} planes.
Reflecting the underlying oxygen order, CoO_2 planes also develop a spin-state
order consisting of Co^{3+} ions in alternating rows of S=1 and S=0 states. The
magnetic structure appears to be composed of weakly coupled ferromagnetic
ladders with Ising-like moments, which gives a simple picture for
magnetotransport phenomena.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted to Phys.Rev.Let
Origin of the large thermoelectric power in oxygen-variable RBaCo_{2}O_{5+x} (R=Gd, Nd)
Thermoelectric properties of GdBaCo_{2}O_{5+x} and NdBaCo_{2}O_{5+x} single
crystals have been studied upon continuous doping of CoO_2 planes with either
electrons or holes. The thermoelectric response and the resistivity behavior
reveal a hopping character of the transport in both compounds, providing the
basis for understanding the recently found remarkable divergence of the Seebeck
coefficient at x=0.5. The doping dependence of the thermoelectric power evinces
that the configurational entropy of charge carriers, enhanced by their spin and
orbital degeneracy, plays a key role in the origin of the large thermoelectric
response in these correlated oxides.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in PR
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