455 research outputs found
Anisotropic magnetoresistance in nanocontacts
We present ab initio calculations of the evolution of anisotropic
magnetoresistance (AMR) in Ni nanocontacts from the ballistic to the tunnel
regime. We find an extraordinary enhancement of AMR, compared to bulk, in two
scenarios. In systems without localized states, like chemically pure break
junctions, large AMR only occurs if the orbital polarization of the current is
large, regardless of the anisotropy of the density of states. In systems that
display localized states close to the Fermi energy, like a single electron
transistor with ferromagnetic electrodes, large AMR is related to the variation
of the Fermi energy as a function of the magnetization direction.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures; revised for publication, new figures in greyscal
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Political ScienceDoctor of Philosophy (PhD
Orbital contribution to the magnetic properties of iron as a function of dimensionality
The orbital contribution to the magnetic properties of Fe in systems of
decreasing dimensionality (bulk, surfaces, wire and free clusters) is
investigated using a tight-binding hamiltonian in an and atomic
orbital basis set including spin-orbit coupling and intra-atomic electronic
interactions in the full Hartree-Fock (HF) scheme, i.e., involving all the
matrix elements of the Coulomb interaction with their exact orbital dependence.
Spin and orbital magnetic moments and the magnetocrystalline anisotropy energy
(MAE) are calculated for several orientations of the magnetization. The results
are systematically compared with those of simplified hamiltonians which give
results close to those obtained from the local spin density approximation. The
full HF decoupling leads to much larger orbital moments and MAE which can reach
values as large as 1 and several tens of meV, respectively, in the
monatomic wire at the equilibrium distance. The reliability of the results
obtained by adding the so-called Orbital Polarization Ansatz (OPA) to the
simplified hamiltonians is also discussed. It is found that when the spin
magnetization is saturated the OPA results for the orbital moment are in
qualitative agreement with those of the full HF model. However there are large
discrepancies for the MAE, especially in clusters. Thus the full HF scheme must
be used to investigate the orbital magnetism and MAE of low dimensional
systems
Pointwise estimates for the Bergman kernel of the weighted Fock space
We prove upper pointwise estimates for the Bergman kernel of the weighted
Fock space of entire functions in where is a
subharmonic function with a doubling measure. We derive estimates
for the canonical solution operator to the inhomogeneous Cauchy-Riemann
equation and we characterize the compactness of this operator in terms of
Supercurrent transferring through c-axis cuprate Josephson junctions with thick normal-metal-bridge
With simple but exactly solvable model, we investigate the supercurrent
transferring through the c-axis cuprate superconductor-normal
metal-superconductor junctions with the clean normal metal much thicker than
its coherence length. It is shown that the supercurrent as a function of
thickness of the normal metal decreases much slower than the exponential
decaying expected by the proximity effect. The present result may account for
the giant proximity effect observed in the c-axis cuprate SNS junctions.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Layer-resolved magnetic exchange interactions of surfaces of late 3d elements: effects of electronic correlations
We present the results of an ab initio study of magnetic properties of Fe, Co
and Ni surfaces. In particular, we discuss their electronic structure and
magnetic exchange interactions (Jij), as obtained by means of a combination of
density functional theory and dynamical mean-field theory. All studied systems
have a pronounced tendency to ferromagnetism both for bulk and surface atoms.
The presence of narrow-band surface states is shown to enhance the magnetic
moment as well as the exchange couplings. The most interesting results were
obtained for the Fe surface where the atoms have a tendency to couple
antiferromagnetically with each other. This interaction is relatively small,
when compared to interlayer ferromagnetic interaction, and strongly depends on
the lattice parameter. Local correlation effects are shown to lead to strong
changes of the overall shape of the spectral functions. However, they seem to
not play a decisive role on the overall picture of the magnetic couplings
studied here. We have also investigated the influence of correlations on the
spin and orbital moments of the bulk-like and surface atoms. We found that
dynamical correlations in general lead to enhanced values of the orbital
moment.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figure
Exploiting Self-Organization in Bioengineered Systems: A Computational Approach
The productivity of bioengineered cell factories is limited by inefficiencies in nutrient delivery and waste and product removal. Current solution approaches explore changes in the physical configurations of the bioreactors. This work investigates the possibilities of exploiting self-organizing vascular networks to support producer cells within the factory. A computational model simulates de novo vascular development of endothelial-like cells and the resultant network functioning to deliver nutrients and extract product and waste from the cell culture. Microbial factories with vascular networks are evaluated for their scalability, robustness, and productivity compared to the cell factories without a vascular network. Initial studies demonstrate that at least an order of magnitude increase in production is possible, the system can be scaled up, and the self-organization of an efficient vascular network is robust. The work suggests that bioengineered multicellularity may offer efficiency improvements difficult to achieve with physical engineering approaches
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