251,804 research outputs found

    Magnetic-field-dependent quasiparticle energy relaxation in mesoscopic wires

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    In order to find out if magnetic impurities can mediate interactions between quasiparticles in metals, we have measured the effect of a magnetic field B on the energy distribution function f(E) of quasiparticles in two silver wires driven out-of-equilibrium by a bias voltage U. In a sample showing sharp distributions at B=0, no magnetic field effect is found, whereas in the other sample, rounded distributions at low magnetic field get sharper as B is increased, with a characteristic field proportional to U. Comparison is made with recent calculations of the effect of magnetic-impurities-mediated interactions taking into account Kondo physics.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to be published in Physical Review Letter

    Hydrodynamic Model for Conductivity in Graphene

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    Based on the recently developed picture of an electronic ideal relativistic fluid at the Dirac point, we present an analytical model for the conductivity in graphene that is able to describe the linear dependence on the carrier density and the existence of a minimum conductivity. The model treats impurities as submerged rigid obstacles, forming a disordered medium through which graphene electrons flow, in close analogy with classical fluid dynamics. To describe the minimum conductivity, we take into account the additional carrier density induced by the impurities in the sample. The model, which predicts the conductivity as a function of the impurity fraction of the sample, is supported by extensive simulations for different values of E{\cal E}, the dimensionless strength of the electric field, and provides excellent agreement with experimental data.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figure

    Influence of magnetic impurities on the heat capacity of nuclear spins

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    It is found that in a wide range of temperatures and magnetic fields even a small concentration of magnetic impurities in a sample leads to a T1T^{-1} temperature dependence of the nuclear heat capacity. This effect is related to a nuclear-spin polarization by the magnetic impurities. The parameter that controls the theory turns out not to be the impurity concentration CimpC_{imp} but instead the quantity cimpμe/μnc_{imp} \mu_e / \mu_n, where μe\mu_e and μn\mu_n are the magnetic moments of an electron and a nucleus, respectively. The ratio of μe\mu_e and μn\mu_n is of order of 10310^3

    Anomalies of upper critical field in the spinel superconductor LiTi2_2O4δ_{4-\delta}

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    High-field electrical transport and point-contact tunneling spectroscopy were used to investigate superconducting properties of the unique spinel oxide, LiTi2_2O4δ_{4-\delta} films with various oxygen content. We find that the upper critical field Bc2B_\mathrm{c2} gradually increases as more oxygen impurities are brought into the samples by carefully tuning the deposition atmosphere. It is striking that although the superconducting transition temperature and energy gap are almost unchanged, an astonishing isotropic Bc2B_\mathrm{c2} up to \sim 26 Tesla is observed in oxygen-rich sample, which is doubled compared to the anoxic sample and breaks the Pauli limit. Such anomalies of Bc2B_\mathrm{c2} were rarely reported in other three dimensional superconductors. Combined with all the anomalies, three dimensional spin-orbit interaction induced by tiny oxygen impurities is naturally proposed to account for the remarkable enhancement of Bc2B_\mathrm{c2} in oxygen-rich LiTi2_2O4δ_{4-\delta} films. Such mechanism could be general and therefore provides ideas for optimizing practical superconductors with higher Bc2B_\mathrm{c2}

    Anisotropic ferromagnetism in carbon doped zinc oxide from first-principles studies

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    A density functional theory study of substitutional carbon impurities in ZnO has been performed, using both the generalized gradient approximation (GGA) and a hybrid functional (HSE06) as exchange-correlation functional. It is found that the non-spinpolarized CZn_\mathrm{Zn} impurity is under almost all conditions thermodynamically more stable than the CO_\mathrm{O} impurity which has a magnetic moment of 2μB2\mu_{\mathrm{B}}, with the exception of very O-poor and C-rich conditions. This explains the experimental difficulties in sample preparation in order to realize d0d^{0}-ferromagnetism in C-doped ZnO. From GGA calculations with large 96-atom supercells, we conclude that two CO_\mathrm{O}-CO_\mathrm{O} impurities in ZnO interact ferromagnetically, but the interaction is found to be short-ranged and anisotropic, much stronger within the hexagonal abab-plane of wurtzite ZnO than along the c-axis. This layered ferromagnetism is attributed to the anisotropy of the dispersion of carbon impurity bands near the Fermi level for CO_{\mathrm{O}} impurities in ZnO. From the calculated results, we derive that a CO_{\mathrm{O}} concentration between 2% and 6% should be optimal to achieve d0d^{0}-ferromagnetism in C-doped ZnO.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure

    Direct visualization of the 3D structure of silicon impurities in graphene

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    We directly visualize the three-dimensional (3D) geometry and dynamics of silicon impurities in graphene as well as their dynamics by aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy. By acquiring images when the sample is tilted, we show that an asymmetry of the atomic position of the heteroatom in the projection reveals the non-planarity of the structure. From a sequence of images, we further demonstrate that the Si atom switches between up- and down- configurations with respect to the graphene plane, with an asymmetric cross-section. We further analyze the 3D structure and dynamics of a silicon tetramer in graphene. Our results clarify the out-of-plane structure of impurities in graphene by direct experimental observation and open a new route to study their dynamics in three dimensions

    Temperature-dependent Drude transport in a two-dimensional electron gas

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    We consider transport of dilute two-dimensional electrons, with temperature between Fermi and Debye temperatures. In this regime, electrons form a nondegenerate plasma with mobility limited by potential disorder. Different kinds of impurities contribute unique signatures to the resulting temperature-dependent Drude conductivity, via energy-dependent scattering. This opens up a way to characterize sample disorder composition. In particular, neutral impurities cause a slow decrease in conductivity with temperature, whereas charged impurities result in conductivity growing as a square root of temperature. This observation serves as a precaution for literally interpreting metallic or insulating conductivity dependence, as both can be found in a classical metallic system.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, published versio
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