14,330 research outputs found

    Giant tunnel magnetoresistance and high annealing stability in CoFeB/MgO/CoFeB magnetic tunnel junctions with synthetic pinned layer

    Full text link
    We investigated the relationship between tunnel magnetoresistance (TMR) ratio and the crystallization of CoFeB layers through annealing in magnetic tunnel junctions (MTJs) with MgO barriers that had CoFe/Ru/CoFeB synthetic ferrimagnet pinned layers with varying Ru spacer thickness (tRu). The TMR ratio increased with increasing annealing temperature (Ta) and tRu, reaching 361% at Ta = 425C, whereas the TMR ratio of the MTJs with pinned layers without Ru spacers decreased at Ta over 325C. Ruthenium spacers play an important role in forming an (001)-oriented bcc CoFeB pinned layer, resulting in a high TMR ratio through annealing at high temperatures.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Applied Physics Letter

    Josephson Vortex States in Intermediate Fields

    Full text link
    Motivated by recent resistance data in high TcT_c superconductors in fields {\it parallel} to the CuO layers, we address two issues on the Josephson-vortex phase diagram, the appearances of structural transitions on the observed first order transition (FOT) curve in intermediate fields and of a lower critical point of the FOT line. It is found that some rotated pinned solids are more stable than the ordinary rhombic pinned solids with vacant interlayer spacings and that, due to the vertical portion in higher fields of the FOT line, the FOT tends to be destroyed by creating a lower critical point.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures. To appear in J.Phys.Soc.Jpn. 71, No.2 (February, 2002

    Emergent Antiferromagnetism in D-wave Superconductor with Strong Paramagnetic Pair-Breaking

    Full text link
    It is theoretically shown that, in the four-fold symmetric d-wave superconducting phase, a paramagnetic pair-breaking (PPB) enhanced sufficiently by increasing the applied magnetic field induces not only the Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov (FFLO) superconducting state but also an incommensurate antiferromagnetic (AFM) order with Q-vector parallel to a gap node. This AFM ordering tends to occur only below H_{c2} at low temperatures, i.e., in the presence of a nonvanishing superconducting energy gap Δ\Delta rather than in the normal phase. Through a detailed study on the resulting AFM order and its interplay with the FFLO spatial modulation of Δ\Delta, it is argued that the strange high field and low temperature (HFLT) superconducting phase of CeCoIn_5 is a coexisting phase of the FFLO and incommensurate AFM orders, and that this PPB mechanism of an AFM ordering is also the origin of the AFM quantum critical fluctuation which has occurred close to H_{c2}(0) in several unconventional superconductors including CeCoIn_5.Comment: 22 pages, 12 figures.2 references and related comnments are added.Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.

    Effect of in-plane line defects on field-tuned superconductor-insulator transition behavior in homogeneous thin film

    Full text link
    Field-tuned superconductor-insulator transition (FSIT) behavior in 2D isotropic and homogeneous thin films is usually accompanied by a nonvanishing critical resistance at low TT. It is shown that, in a 2D film including line defects paralle to each other but with random positions perpendicular to them, the (apparent) critical resistance in low TT limit vanishes, as in the 1D quantum superconducting (SC) transition, under a current parallel to the line defects. This 1D-like critical resistive behavior is more clearly seen in systems with weaker point disorder and may be useful in clarifying whether the true origin of FSIT behavior in the parent superconductor is the glass fluctuation or the quantum SC fluctuation. As a by-product of the present calculation, it is also pointed out that, in 2D films with line-like defects with a long but {\it finite} correlation length parallel to the lines, a quantum metallic behavior intervening the insulating and SC ones appears in the resistivity curves.Comment: 16 pages, 14 figure

    Agterberg, Zheng, and Mukherjee Reply

    Full text link
    Reply to Ikeda (arXiv:0712.3341).Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev. Let

    Theoretical Description of Resistive Behavior near a Quantum Vortex-Glass Transition

    Full text link
    Resistive behaviors at nonzero temperatures (T > 0) reflecting a quantum vortex-glass (VG) transition (the so-called field-tuned superconductor-insulator transition at T=0) are studied based on a quantum Ginzburg-Landau (GL) action for a s-wave pairing case containing microscopic details. The ordinary dissipative dynamics of the pair-field is assumed on the basis of a consistency between the fluctuation conductance terms excluded from GL approach and an observed negative magnetoresistance. It is shown that the VG contribution, G_{vg}(B=B_{vg}, T \to 0),to 2D fluctuation conductance at the VG transition field B_{vg} depends on the strength of a repulsive-interaction between electrons and takes a universal value only in the ordinary dirty limit neglecting the electron-repulsion. Available resistivity data near B_{vg} are discussed based on our results, and extensions to the cases of a d-wave pairing and of 3D systems are briefly commented on.Comment: Explanation of data in strongly disordered case, as well as Fig.2 and 3, was renewed, and comments on recent publications were added. To appear in J.Phys.Soc. Jp

    Commuting difference operators arising from the elliptic C_2^{(1)}-face model

    Get PDF
    We study a pair of commuting difference operators arising from the elliptic C_2^{(1)}-face model. The operators, whose coefficients are expressed in terms of the Jacobi's elliptic theta function, act on the space of meromorphic functions on the weight space of the C_2 type simple Lie algebra. We show that the space of functions spanned by the level one characters of the affine Lie algebra sp(4,C) is invariant under the action of the difference operators.Comment: latex2e file, 19 pages, no figures; added reference

    CoFeB Thickness Dependence of Thermal Stability Factor in CoFeB/MgO Perpendicular Magnetic Tunnel Junctions

    Full text link
    Thermal stability factor (delta) of recording layer was studied in perpendicular anisotropy CoFeB/MgO magnetic tunnel junctions (p-MTJs) with various CoFeB recording layer thicknesses and junction sizes. In all series of p-MTJs with different thicknesses, delta is virtually independent of the junction sizes of 48-81 nm in diameter. The values of delta increase linearly with increasing the recording layer thickness. The slope of the linear fit is explained well by a model based on nucleation type magnetization reversal.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure

    Charge-stripe order in the electronic ferroelectric LuFe2O4

    Full text link
    The structural features of the charge ordering states in LuFe2O4 are characterized by in-situ cooling TEM observations from 300K down to 20K. Two distinctive structural modulations, a major q1= (1/3, 1/3, 2) and a weak q2=q1/10 + (0, 0, 3/2), have been well determined at the temperature of 20K. Systematic analysis demonstrates that the charges at low temperatures are well crystallized in a charge stripe phase, in which the charge density wave behaviors in a non-sinusoidal fashion resulting in elemental electric dipoles for ferroelectricity. It is also noted that the charge ordering and ferroelectric domains often change markedly with lowering temperatures and yields a rich variety of structural phenomena.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure

    13CO Cores in Taurus Molecular Cloud

    Full text link
    Young stars form in molecular cores, which are dense condensations within molecular clouds. We have searched for molecular cores traced by 13^{13}CO J=10J=1\to 0 emission in the Taurus molecular cloud and studied their properties. Our data set has a spatial dynamic range (the ratio of linear map size to the pixel size) of about 1000 and spectrally resolved velocity information, which together allow a systematic examination of the distribution and dynamic state of 13^{13}CO cores in a large contiguous region. We use empirical fit to the CO and CO2_2 ice to correct for depletion of gas-phase CO. The 13^{13}CO core mass function (13^{13}CO CMF) can be fitted better with a log-normal function than with a power law function. We also extract cores and calculate the 13^{13}CO CMF based on the integrated intensity of 13^{13}CO and the CMF from 2MASS. We demonstrate that there exists core blending, i.e.\ combined structures that are incoherent in velocity but continuous in column density. The core velocity dispersion (CVD), which is the variance of the core velocity difference δv\delta v, exhibits a power-law behavior as a function of the apparent separation LL:\ CVD (km/s) L(pc)0.7\propto L ({\rm pc})^{0.7}. This is similar to Larson's law for the velocity dispersion of the gas. The peak velocities of 13^{13}CO cores do not deviate from the centroid velocities of the ambient 12^{12}CO gas by more than half of the line width. The low velocity dispersion among cores, the close similarity between CVD and Larson's law, and the small separation between core centroid velocities and the ambient gas all suggest that molecular cores condense out of the diffuse gas without additional energy from star formation or significant impact from converging flows.Comment: 46 pages, 23 figures, accepted by Ap
    corecore