scholarly journals Особенности поведения ионов Mn-=SUP=-2+-=/SUP=- в 3D-дираковском полуметалле alpha-Cd-=SUB=-3-=/SUB=-As-=SUB=-2-=/SUB=- по данным ЭПР

2021 ◽  
Vol 63 (2) ◽  
pp. 199
Author(s):  
Ю.В. Горюнов ◽  
А.Н. Натепров

The behavior of the manganese impurity in the 3D Dirac semimetal Cd3As2 has been studied by EPR and electromagnetic measurements. It was found that, in contrast to doping with europium, doping with manganese, as well as with iron, does not lead to a change in the sign of the magnetoresistance, which is almost completely suppressed at high manganese concentrations. In this case, a change in the type of the influence of the magnetic field on the contact potential is manifested. The g-factors measured in EPR coincide with the g-factor of a free electron at all temperatures, which, taking into account the fluctuation behavior of the EPR linewidth and the reduced magnetic moment on Mn2 +, indicates the formation of short-lived bound states of the Mn2 + ion and conduction electrons - antiferromagnetic polarons.

1998 ◽  
Vol 13 (05) ◽  
pp. 841-861 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. P. BALACHANDRAN ◽  
VARGHESE JOHN ◽  
ARSHAD MOMEN ◽  
FERNANDO MORAES

Using a description of defects in solids in terms of three-dimensional gravity, we study the propagation of electrons in the background of disclinations and screw dislocations. We study the situations where there are bound states that are effectively localized on the defect and hence can be described in terms of an effective (1+1)-dimensional field theory for the low energy excitations. In the case of screw dislocations, we find that these excitations are chiral and can be described by an effective field theory of chiral fermions. Fermions of both chirality occur even for a given direction of the magnetic field. The "net" chirality of the system however is not always the same for a given direction of the magnetic field, but changes from one sign of the chirality through zero to the other sign as the Fermi momentum or the magnitude of the magnetic flux is varied. On coupling to an external electromagnetic field, the latter becomes anomalous and predicts novels conduction properties for these material.


A thin film or wire of metal has a lower electrical conductivity than the bulk material if the thickness is comparable with or smaller than the electronic mean free path. Previous workers have obtained expressions for the magnitude of the effect by integrating the Boltzmann equation and imposing the appropriate boundary conditions. The problem is re-examined from a kinetic theory standpoint, and it is shown that the same expressions are obtained by this method, usually rather more simply, while the physical picture is considerably clarified. The method is applied to an evaluation of the conductivity of a thin wire with a magnetic field along the axis, and it is found that the resistivity should decrease as the magnetic field is increased; it should be possible to derive the mean free path and velocity of the conduction electrons by comparison of theory and experiment. The theory has been confirmed by experimental measurements on sodium; estimates of electronic velocity and mean free path are obtained which are in fair agreement with the values given by the free-electron theory.


1990 ◽  
Vol 68 (11) ◽  
pp. 1227-1236
Author(s):  
G. Pocobelli

We calculate the magnetic field of a free-electron-laser's wiggler of a recent design (Granatstein et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 74, 643 (1985)) using sheet electron beams. We did not assume periodic boundary conditions, as was done in their work, and we obtained analytical expressions in two of the three space variables. We found various irregularities in the field behavior that were dependent on the size of the wiggler in the x direction (parallel to the beam's wide size), and that increased up to a width an order of magnitude greater than the height of the beam channel. These irregularities had been observed in field measurements. A method consisting of making the end magnets thinner worked effectively to reduce the irregularities. We also studied a similar magnetic configuration with free and independent currents and no magnets, and added the additional degree of freedom of programming the currents to further reduce the irregularities.


2008 ◽  
Vol 22 (25n26) ◽  
pp. 4434-4441
Author(s):  
SHIGEJI FUJITA ◽  
NEBI DEMEZ ◽  
JEONG-HYUK KIM ◽  
H. C. HO

The motion of the guiding center of magnetic circulation generates a charge transport. By applying kinetic theory to the guiding center motion, an expression for the magnetoconductivity σ is obtained: σ = e2ncτ/M*, where M* is the magnetotransport mass distinct from the cyclotron mass, nc the density of the conduction electrons, and τ the relaxation time. The density nc depends on the magnetic field direction relative to copper's fcc lattice, when Cu's Fermi surface is nonspherical with “necks”. The anisotropic magnetoresistance is analyzed based on a one-parameter model, and compared with experiments. A good fit is obtained.


2009 ◽  
Vol 23 (26) ◽  
pp. 5109-5118 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. JOHN PETER

The binding energy of shallow hydrogenic impurities in parabolic GaAs/GaAlAs quantum dots is calculated as a function of dot radius in the influence of magnetic field. The binding energy has been calculated following a variational procedure within the effective-mass approximation. Calculations are presented with constant effective-mass and position dependent effective masses. A finite confining potential well with depth is determined by the discontinuity of the band gap in the quantum dot and the cladding. The results show that the impurity binding energy (i) increases as the dot radius decreases for the infinite case, (ii) reaches a peak value around 1R* as the dot radius decreases and then diminishes to a limiting value corresponding to the radius for which there are no bound states in the well for the infinite case, and (iii) increases with the magnetic field. Also it is found that (i) the use of constant effective mass (0.067 m0) is justified for dot sizes ≥ a* where a* is the effective Bohr radius which is about 100 Å for GaAs , in the estimation of ionization energy and (ii) the binding energy shows complicated behavior when the position dependent mass is included for the dot size ≤ a*. These results are compared with the available existing literatures.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Haijiao Ji ◽  
Yueting Pan ◽  
Haiwen Liu

Abstract Electron in gapless bilayer graphene can form quasi-bound states when a circular symmetric potential is created in bilayer graphene. These quasi-bound states can be adjusted by tuning the radius and strength of the potential barrier. We investigate the evolution of quasi-bound states spectra in the circular n–p junction of bilayer graphene under the magnetic field numerically. The energy levels of opposite angular momentum split and the splitting increases with the magnetic field. Moreover, weak magnetic fields can slightly shift the energy levels of quasi-bound states. While strong magnetic fields induce additional resonances in the local density states, which originates from Landau levels. We demonstrate that these numerical results are consistent with the semiclassical analysis based on Wentzel–Kramers–Brillouin approximation. Our results can be verified experimentally via scanning tunneling microscopy measurements.


2006 ◽  
Vol 984 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans Malissa ◽  
Wolfgang Jantsch ◽  
Friedrich Schäffler ◽  
Zbyslaw Wilamowski

AbstractWe report the observation of a particularly simple effect of spin-orbit coupling which allows for efficient manipulation of spins by an electric current in semiconductor nanostructures. Passing an electric current density of j = 2.5 mA/cm through a modulation doped Si quantum well (density of 5 × 1011 cm-2) perpendicular to an in-plane magnetic field, we observe a shift of the spin resonance of the conduction electrons (CESR) by about 0.1 mT. This shift reverses sign when we invert (i) the current direction, (ii) the magnetic field direction and it vanishes for perpendicular magnetic field. We show that this current-induced shift in g-factor, i.e., its dependence on current and carrier density, its temperature dependence and its anisotropy can be consistently and quantitatively explained in terms of the Bychkov-Rashba coefficient determined earlier from the CESR broadening and the g-factor anisotropy [1]. Other sources of magnetic field (e.g. the Oersted effect) are negligible. This effect can be utilized for g-factor tuning, and thus for local spin manipulation: passing a current through some part of a sample may be utilized to bring those electrons into resonance with a microwave field. These spins are thus excited to Rabi oscillations and, using current pulses of suitable duration, π rotations (or by any other angle) can be achieved.


In an earlier paper the wave functions and eigenvalues for an electron moving in a magnetic field, and interacting with one component of lattice potential, were analysed in terms of a model of coupled localized orbits. The model is now examined in more detail and shown to be a reasonable approximation to one possible representation of the true wave function. It is then extended to cover the case of a two-dimensional metal, the model now consisting of a network of interlocking orbits, on which an electron can move with specified probability amplitude for making a transition between orbits at any junction point. The problem of periodicity of the structure is discussed carefully, and it is found that the phase changes accompanying gauge transformations assume great importance. It is shown that the magnetic field imposes a periodicity on the network which is not in general compatible with that of the lattice potential, and the consequences are briefly investigated with the conclusion that they are probably observable only with difficulty. A special case, the hexagonal network, is then solved exactly, the magnetic field being chosen to avoid the above mentioned difficulty of incompatible periodicities. From the solution an energy level diagram is constructed, showing how the free-electron levels are broadened by the lattice potential and, as this is made stronger, reconstruct themselves into the sharp level system predicted by Onsager’s semi-classical method. In the intermediate stages of the process the bands contact each other frequently and other types of singularity appear. It is claimed that the structure revealed by this simple model is more elaborate than anything that could be readily derived by a perturbation treatment of the magnetic field. The electrons are able to move as quasi-particles in straight lines in any direction through the lattice, the velocity being derived from the energy level structure by the standard formula h~x^ kE.. When the bands are at their broadest the velocity is comparable with that of a free electron near the corners of the Brillouin zone. The contribution of the quasiparticles to the conductivity of the metal is evaluated on the assumption that the width of individual bands is rather less than kT ,so that much of the rapid variation of conductivity with Fermi energy is smoothed out. The variations that are left are still considerable and have a periodicity determined by the smallest quantized orbits. The results of the theory are applied to the fairly extensive, though not always consistent,observations of oscillatory behaviour in zinc. The anomalous variation with field strength of the de Haas-van Alphen amplitude can be satisfactorily explained if it is assumed that the energy gap across the sides of the Brillouin zone is about 0.027 eV. The vigorous resistance oscillations, attributed by Stark to magnetic breakdown changing some of the hole orbits into electron orbits, are shown to require more than this, though this effect is certainly important and is implied by the theory. It is suggested that the quasi-particles provide the necessary extra mechanism to account for resistance and Hall-effect data, but quantitative comparison is far from satisfactory, and it is concluded that more data and further analysis are probably needed. Stark’s proposal that the fine structure of the oscillations are due to spin, with a g -factor of 34, is disputed since it appears that the quasi-particle conductivity possesses the right sort of fine structure to account for the observations.


SPIN ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 09 (04) ◽  
pp. 1940013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jing Wang ◽  
Biao Lian ◽  
Shou-Cheng Zhang

Pure spin currents carry information in quantum spintronics and could play an essential role in the next generation low-energy-consumption electronics. Here, we theoretically predict that the magnetic field can induce a quantum spin current without a concomitant charge current in metals without time reversal symmetry [Formula: see text] and inversion symmetry [Formula: see text] but respect the combined [Formula: see text] symmetry. It is governed by the magnetic moment of the Bloch states on the Fermi surface, and can be regarded as a spinful generalization of the gyrotropic magnetic effect in [Formula: see text]-broken metals. The effect is explicitly studied for a minimal model of an antiferromagnetic Dirac semimetal, where the experimental signature is proposed. We further propose candidate materials, including topological antiferromagnetic Dirac semimetals, Weyl semimetals and tenary Heusler compounds.


2021 ◽  
Vol 91 (2) ◽  
pp. 275
Author(s):  
И.В. Янилкин ◽  
А.И. Гумаров ◽  
А.М. Рогов ◽  
Р.В. Юсупов ◽  
Л.Р. Тагиров

Niobium films of 4–100 nm thickness were synthesized on a silicon substrate under ultrahigh vacuum conditions. Measurements of electrical resistance showed a high temperature of the superconducting transition Tc, in the range of 4.7–9.1 K, and extremely small transition widths ΔTc in the range of 260–11 mK. The dependences of Tc and ΔTc on the magnetic field were studied, and superconducting coherence lengths and mean free paths of the conduction electrons were determined for different thicknesses of the synthesized films. A specific effect of the magnetic field on ΔTc was found, which reveals a transition from three-dimensional to two-dimensional superconductivity at thicknesses below 10 nm. The dependences of Tc and ΔTc on the films thickness and the magnitude of the magnetic field are discussed in the framework of existing concepts of superconductivity in thin films of superconducting metals.


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