51 research outputs found
Static and dynamic properties of vortices in anisotropic magnetic disks
We investigate the effect of the magnetic anisotropy () on the static
and dynamic properties of magnetic vortices in small disks. Our micromagnetic
calculations reveal that for a range of there is an enlargement of the
vortex core. We analyze the influence of on the dynamics of the vortex
core magnetization reversal under the excitation of a pulsed field. The
presence of , which leads to better resolved vortex structures, allows us
to discuss in more details the role played by the in-plane and perpendicular
components of the gyrotropic field during the vortex-antivortex nucleation and
annihilation.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Griffiths phases in the strongly disordered Kondo necklace model
The effect of strong disorder on the one-dimensional Kondo necklace model is
studied using a perturbative real-space renormalization group approach which
becomes asymptotically exact in the low energy limit. The phase diagram of the
model presents a random quantum critical point separating two phases; the {\em
random singlet phase} of a quantum disordered XY chain and the random Kondo
phase. We also consider an anisotropic version of the model and show that it
maps on the strongly disordered transverse Ising model. The present results
provide a rigorous microscopic basis for non-Fermi liquid behavior in
disordered heavy fermions due to Griffiths phases.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Adatoms and Anderson localization in graphene
We address the nature of the disordered state that results from the
adsorption of adatoms in graphene. For adatoms that sit at the center of the
honeycomb plaquette, as in the case of most transition metals, we show that the
ones that form a zero-energy resonant state lead to Anderson localization in
the vicinity of the Dirac point. Among those, we show that there is a symmetry
class of adatoms where Anderson localization is suppressed, leading to an
exotic metallic state with large and rare charge droplets, that localizes only
at the Dirac point. We identify the experimental conditions for the observation
of the Anderson transition for adatoms in graphene.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, 2 appendixes, Final versio
Quantum Hall Effect in Graphene with Interface-Induced Spin-Orbit Coupling
We consider an effective model for graphene with interface-induced spin-orbit
coupling and calculate the quantum Hall effect in the low-energy limit. We
perform a systematic analysis of the contribution of the different terms of the
effective Hamiltonian to the quantum Hall effect (QHE). By analysing the
spin-splitting of the quantum Hall states as a function of magnetic field and
gate-voltage, we obtain different scaling laws that can be used to characterise
the spin-orbit coupling in experiments. Furthermore, we employ a real-space
quantum transport approach to calculate the quantum Hall conductivity and
investigate the robustness of the QHE to disorder introduced by hydrogen
impurities. For that purpose, we combine first-principles calculations and a
genetic algorithm strategy to obtain a graphene-only Hamiltonian that models
the impurity
Real-space calculation of the conductivity tensor for disordered topological matter
We describe an efficient numerical approach to calculate the longitudinal and
transverse Kubo conductivities of large systems using Bastin's formulation. We
expand the Green's functions in terms of Chebyshev polynomials and compute the
conductivity tensor for any temperature and chemical potential in a single
step. To illustrate the power and generality of the approach, we calculate the
conductivity tensor for the quantum Hall effect in disordered graphene and
analyze the effect of the disorder in a Chern insulator in Haldane's model on a
honeycomb lattice.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures and a supplementary material (3 pages
The effect of the Abrikosov vortex phase on spin and charge states in magnetic semiconductor-superconductor hybrids
We explore the possibility of using the inhomogeneous magnetic field carried
by an Abrikosov vortex in a type-II superconductor to localize spin-polarized
textures in a nearby magnetic semiconductor quantum well. We show how
Zeeman-induced localization induced by a single vortex is indeed possible, and
use these results to investigate the effect of a periodic vortex array on the
transport properties of the magnetic semiconductor. In particular, we find an
unconventional Integer Quantum Hall regime, and predict directly testable
experimental consequences due to the presence of the periodic spin polarized
structure induced by the superconducting vortex lattice in the magnetic
semiconductor.Comment: 12 pages, 15 figure
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