119,855 research outputs found
Graphene spin capacitor for magnetic field sensing
An analysis of a novel magnetic field sensor based on a graphene spin
capacitor is presented. The proposed device consists of graphene nanoribbons on
top of an insulator material connected to a ferromagnetic source/drain. The
time evolution of spin polarized electrons injected into the capacitor can be
used for an accurate determination at room temperature of external magnetic
fields. Assuming a spin relaxation time of 100 ns, magnetic fields on the order
of mOe may be detected at room temperature. The observational
accuracy of this device depends on the density of magnetic defects and spin
relaxation time that can be achieved.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Bistability in a magnetic and nonmagnetic double-quantum-well structure mediated by the magnetic phase transition
The hole distribution in a double quantum well (QW) structure consisting of a
magnetic and a nonmagnetic semiconductor QW is investigated as a function of
temperature, the energy shift between the QWs, and other relevant parameters.
When the itinerant holes mediate the ferromagnetic ordering, it is shown that a
bistable state can be formed through hole redistribution, resulting in a
significant change in the properties of the constituting magnetic QW (i.e., the
paramagnetic-ferromagnetic transition). The model calculation also indicates a
large window in the system parameter space where the bistability is possible.
Hence, this structure could form the basis of a stable memory element that may
be scaled down to a few hole regime.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Facilitation of polymer looping and giant polymer diffusivity in crowded solutions of active particles
We study the dynamics of polymer chains in a bath of self-propelled particles
(SPP) by extensive Langevin dynamics simulations in a two dimensional system.
Specifically, we analyse the polymer looping properties versus the SPP activity
and investigate how the presence of the active particles alters the chain
conformational statistics. We find that SPPs tend to extend flexible polymer
chains while they rather compactify stiffer semiflexible polymers, in agreement
with previous results. Here we show that larger activities of SPPs yield a
higher effective temperature of the bath and thus facilitate looping kinetics
of a passive polymer chain. We explicitly compute the looping probability and
looping time in a wide range of the model parameters. We also analyse the
motion of a monomeric tracer particle and the polymer's centre of mass in the
presence of the active particles in terms of the time averaged mean squared
displacement, revealing a giant diffusivity enhancement for the polymer chain
via SPP pooling. Our results are applicable to rationalising the dimensions and
looping kinetics of biopolymers at constantly fluctuating and often actively
driven conditions inside biological cells or suspensions of active colloidal
particles or bacteria cells.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, IOPLaTe
Glassy dynamics of partially pinned fluids: an alternative mode-coupling approach
We use a simple mode-coupling approach to investigate glassy dynamics of
partially pinned fluid systems. Our approach is different from the
mode-coupling theory developed by Krakoviack [Phys. Rev. Lett. 94, 065703
(2005), Phys. Rev. E 84, 050501(R) (2011)]. In contrast to Krakoviack's theory,
our approach predicts a random pinning glass transition scenario that is
qualitatively the same as the scenario obtained using a mean-field analysis of
the spherical p-spin model and a mean-field version of the random first-order
transition theory. We use our approach to calculate quantities which are often
considered to be indicators of growing dynamic correlations and static
point-to-set correlations. We find that the so-called static overlap is
dominated by the simple, low pinning fraction contribution. Thus, at least for
randomly pinned fluid systems, only a careful quantitative analysis of
simulation results can reveal genuine, many-body point-to-set correlations
Unusual magnetoresistance in a topological insulator with a single ferromagnetic barrier
Tunneling surface current through a thin ferromagnetic barrier in a
three-dimensional topological insulator is shown to possess an extraordinary
response to the orientation of barrier magnetization. In contrast to
conventional magnetoresistance devices that are sensitive to the relative
alignment of two magnetic layers, a drastic change in the transmission current
is achieved by a single layer when its magnetization rotates by 90 degrees.
Numerical estimations predict a giant magnetoresistance as large as 800 % at
room temperature and the proximate exchange interaction of 40 meV in the
barrier. When coupled with electrical control of magnetization direction, this
phenomenon may be used to enhance the gating function with potentially sharp
turn-on/off for low power applications
Weak ferromagnetism of antiferromagnetic domains in graphene with defects
Magnetic properties of graphene with randomly distributed magnetic
defects/vacancies are studied in terms of the Kondo Hamiltonian in the mean
field approximation. It has been shown that graphene with defects undergoes a
magnetic phase transition from a paramagnetic to a antiferromagnetic (AFM)
phase once the temperature reaches the critical point . The defect
straggling is taken into account as an assignable cause of multiple nucleation
into AFM domains. Since each domain is characterized by partial compensating
magnetization of the defects associated with different sublattices, together
they reveal a super-paramagnetic behavior in a magnetic field. Theory
qualitatively describe the experimental data provided the temperature
dependence of the AFM domain structure.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figure
Phonon-mediated electron spin phase diffusion in a quantum dot
An effective spin relaxation mechanism that leads to electron spin
decoherence in a quantum dot is proposed. In contrast to the common
calculations of spin-flip transitions between the Kramers doublets, we take
into account a process of phonon-mediated fluctuation in the electron spin
precession and subsequent spin phase diffusion. Specifically, we consider
modulations in the longitudinal g-factor and hyperfine interaction induced by
the phonon-assisted transitions between the lowest electronic states. Prominent
differences in the temperature and magnetic field dependence between the
proposed mechanisms and the spin-flip transitions are expected to facilitate
its experimental verification. Numerical estimation demonstrates highly
efficient spin relaxation in typical semiconductor quantum dots.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
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