146 research outputs found

    Fundamental Magnetic Properties and Structural Implications for Nanocrystalline Fe-Ti-N Thin Films

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    The magnetization (M) as a function of temperature (T) from 2 to 300 K and in-plane field (H) up to 1 kOe, room temperature easy and hard direction in-plane field hysteresis loops for fields between -100 and +100 Oe, and 10 GHz ferromagnetic resonance (FMR) profiles have been measured for a series of soft-magnetic nano-crystalline 50 nm thick Fe-Ti-N films made by magnetron sputtering in an in-plane field. The nominal titanium concentration was 3 at. % and the nitrogen concentrations (xN) ranged from zero to 12.7 at. %. The saturation magnetization (Ms) vs. T data and the extracted exchange parameters as a function of xN are consistent with a lattice expansion due to the addition of interstitial nitrogen in the body-centered-cubic (bcc) lattice and a structural transition to body-centered-tetragonal (bct) in the 6-8 at. % nitrogen range. The hysteresis loop and FMR data show a consistent picture of the changes in both the uniaxial and cubic anisotropy as a function of xN. Films with xN > 1.9 at. % show an overall uniaxial anisotropy, with an anisotropy field parameter Hu that increases with xN. The corresponding dispersion averaged uniaxial anisotropy energy density parameter = HuMs/2 is a linear function of xN, with a rate of increase of 950 erg/cm3 per at. % nitrogen. The estimated uniaxial anisotropy energy per nitrogen atom is 30 J/mol, a value consistent with other systems. For xN below 6 at. %, the scaling of coercive force Hc data with the sixth power of the grain size D indicate a grain averaged effective cubic anisotropy energy density parameter that is about an order of magnitude smaller that the nominal K1 values for iron, and give a quantitative vs. D response that matches predictions for exchange coupled random grains with cubic anisotropy.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figure

    A New Type of Electron Nuclear-Spin Interaction from Resistively Detected NMR in the Fractional Quantum Hall Effect Regime

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    Two dimensional electron gases in narrow GaAs quantum wells show huge longitudinal resistance (HLR) values at certain fractional filling factors. Applying an RF field with frequencies corresponding to the nuclear spin splittings of {69}Ga, {71}Ga and {75}As leads to a substantial decreases of the HLR establishing a novel type of resistively detected NMR. These resonances are split into four sub lines each. Neither the number of sub lines nor the size of the splitting can be explained by established interaction mechanisms.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Layer charge instability in unbalanced bilayer systems in the quantum Hall regime

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    Measurements in GaAs hole bilayers with unequal layer densities reveal a pronounced magneto-resistance hysteresis at the magnetic field positions where either the majority or minority layer is at Landau level filling factor one. At a fixed field in the hysteretic regions, the resistance exhibits an unusual time dependence, consisting of random, bidirectional jumps followed by slow relaxations. These anomalies are apparently caused by instabilities in the charge distribution of the two layers.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Electrically-Controlled Nuclear Spin Polarization and Relaxation by Quantum-Hall states

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    We investigate interactions between electrons and nuclear spins by using the resistance (Rxx) peak which develops near filling factor n = 2/3 as a probe. By temporarily tuning n to a different value, ntemp, with a gate, the Rxx peak is shown to relax quickly on both sides of ntemp = 1. This is due to enhanced nuclear spin relaxation by Skyrmions, and demonstrates the dominant role of nuclear spin in the transport anomaly near n = 2/3. We also observe an additional enhancement in the nuclear spin relaxation around n = 1/2 and 3/2, which suggests a Fermi sea of partially-polarized composite fermions.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure

    Magnetic behaviour of ferromagnets with random anisotropy

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    This article reports on a magnetometric study of the effects of diluted local random anisotropy in a ferromagnetic Fe80B20 amorphous matrix. In the low‐temperature and low‐field regime the samples, Fe74RE6B20 (RE=Nd, Ce), show a very rich behavior as a consequence of the competition between, and different dependence on T, of the correlation length associated with local random anisotropy and exchange interactions. In the high‐field regime (Happlied≥1.5 kOe) we observe ferromagnetic behavior with the saturation magnetization varying with temperature according to Bloch’s law. The spin wave stiffness constant D could be determined and lies close to 100 meVÅ2

    Strong, Ultra-narrow Peaks of Longitudinal and Hall Resistances in the Regime of Breakdown of the Quantum Hall Effect

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    With unusually slow and high-resolution sweeps of magnetic field, strong, ultra-narrow (width down to 100μT100 {\rm \mu T}) resistance peaks are observed in the regime of breakdown of the quantum Hall effect. The peaks are dependent on the directions and even the history of magnetic field sweeps, indicating the involvement of a very slow physical process. Such a process and the sharp peaks are, however, not predicted by existing theories. We also find a clear connection between the resistance peaks and nuclear spin polarization.Comment: 5 pages with 3 figures. To appear in PR

    Three-vortex configurations in trapped Bose-Einstein condensates

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    We report on the creation of three-vortex clusters in a 87Rb^{87}Rb Bose-Einstein condensate by oscillatory excitation of the condensate. This procedure can create vortices of both circulation, so that we are able to create several types of vortex clusters using the same mechanism. The three-vortex configurations are dominated by two types, namely, an equilateral-triangle arrangement and a linear arrangement. We interpret these most stable configurations respectively as three vortices with the same circulation, and as a vortex-antivortex-vortex cluster. The linear configurations are very likely the first experimental signatures of predicted stationary vortex clusters.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Anderson localization transition with long-ranged hoppings : analysis of the strong multifractality regime in terms of weighted Levy sums

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    For Anderson tight-binding models in dimension dd with random on-site energies ϵr\epsilon_{\vec r} and critical long-ranged hoppings decaying typically as Vtyp(r)V/rdV^{typ}(r) \sim V/r^d, we show that the strong multifractality regime corresponding to small VV can be studied via the standard perturbation theory for eigenvectors in quantum mechanics. The Inverse Participation Ratios Yq(L)Y_q(L), which are the order parameters of Anderson transitions, can be written in terms of weighted L\'evy sums of broadly distributed variables (as a consequence of the presence of on-site random energies in the denominators of the perturbation theory). We compute at leading order the typical and disorder-averaged multifractal spectra τtyp(q)\tau_{typ}(q) and τav(q)\tau_{av}(q) as a function of qq. For q<1/2q<1/2, we obtain the non-vanishing limiting spectrum τtyp(q)=τav(q)=d(2q1)\tau_{typ}(q)=\tau_{av}(q)=d(2q-1) as V0+V \to 0^+. For q>1/2q>1/2, this method yields the same disorder-averaged spectrum τav(q)\tau_{av}(q) of order O(V)O(V) as obtained previously via the Levitov renormalization method by Mirlin and Evers [Phys. Rev. B 62, 7920 (2000)]. In addition, it allows to compute explicitly the typical spectrum, also of order O(V)O(V), but with a different qq-dependence τtyp(q)τav(q)\tau_{typ}(q) \ne \tau_{av}(q) for all q>qc=1/2q>q_c=1/2. As a consequence, we find that the corresponding singularity spectra ftyp(α)f_{typ}(\alpha) and fav(α)f_{av}(\alpha) differ even in the positive region f>0f>0, and vanish at different values α+typ>α+av\alpha_+^{typ} > \alpha_+^{av}, in contrast to the standard picture. We also obtain that the saddle value αtyp(q)\alpha_{typ}(q) of the Legendre transform reaches the termination point α+typ\alpha_+^{typ} where ftyp(α+typ)=0f_{typ}(\alpha_+^{typ})=0 only in the limit q+q \to +\infty.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, v2=final versio

    Buckling instability in type-II superconductors with strong pinning

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    We predict a novel buckling instability in the critical state of thin type-II superconductors with strong pinning. This elastic instability appears in high perpendicular magnetic fields and may cause an almost periodic series of flux jumps visible in the magnetization curve. As an illustration we apply the obtained criteria to a long rectangular strip.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev. Let

    Ferromagnetic Domain Distribution in Thin Films During Magnetization Reversal

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    We have shown that polarized neutron reflectometry can determine in a model-free way not only the mean magnetization of a ferromagnetic thin film at any point of a hysteresis cycle, but also the mean square dispersion of the magnetization vectors of its lateral domains. This technique is applied to elucidate the mechanism of the magnetization reversal of an exchange-biased Co/CoO bilayer. The reversal process above the blocking temperature is governed by uniaxial domain switching, while below the blocking temperature the reversal of magnetization for the trained sample takes place with substantial domain rotation
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