1,808 research outputs found
Capacitance of Gated GaAs/AlGaAs Heterostructures Subject to In-plane Magnetic Fields
A detailed analysis of the capacitance of gated GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructures
is presented. The nonlinear dependence of the capacitance on the gate voltage
and in-plane magnetic field is discussed together with the capacitance quantum
steps connected with a population of higher 2D gas subbands. The results of
full self-consistent numerical calculations are compared to recent experimental
data.Comment: 4 pages, Revtex. 4 PostScript figures in an uuencoded compressed file
available upon request. Phys. Rev.B, in pres
Novel critical field in magneto-resistance oscillation of 2DEG in asymmetric GaAs/AlGaAs double wells measured as a function of the in-plane magnetic field
We have investigated the magnetoresistance of strongly asymmetric double-well
structures formed by a thin AlGaAs barrier grown far from the interface in the
GaAs buffer of standard heterostructures. In magnetic fields oriented parallel
to the electron layers, the magnetoresistance exhibits an oscillation
associated with the depopulation of the higher occupied subband and with the
field-induced transition into a decoupled bilayer. In addition, the increasing
field transfers electrons from the triangular to rectangular well and, at high
enough field value, the triangular well is emptied. Consequently, the
electronic system becomes a single layer which leads to a sharp step in the
density of electron states and to an additional minimum in the
magnetoresistance curve.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure
Effect of inversion asymmetry on the intrinsic anomalous Hall effect in ferromagnetic (Ga,Mn)As
The relativistic nature of the electron motion underlies the intrinsic part
of the anomalous Hall effect, believed to dominate in ferromagnetic (Ga,Mn)As.
In this paper, we concentrate on the crystal band structure as an important
facet to the description of this phenomenon. Using different k.p and
tight-binding computational schemes, we capture the strong effect of the bulk
inversion asymmetry on the Berry curvature and the anomalous Hall conductivity.
At the same time, we find it not to affect other important characteristics of
(Ga,Mn)As, namely the Curie temperature and uniaxial anisotropy fields. Our
results extend the established theories of the anomalous Hall effect in
ferromagnetic semiconductors and shed new light on its puzzling nature
Mn incorporation in as-grown and annealed (Ga,Mn)As layers studied by x-ray diffraction and standing-wave uorescence
A combination of high-resolution x-ray diffraction and a new technique of
x-ray standing wave uorescence at grazing incidence is employed to study the
structure of (Ga,Mn)As diluted magnetic semiconductor and its changes during
post-growth annealing steps. We find that the film is formed by a uniform,
single crystallographic phase epilayer covered by a thin surface layer with
enhanced Mn concentration due to Mn atoms at random non-crystallographic
positions. In the epilayer, Mn incorporated at interstitial position has a
dominant effect on lattice expansion as compared to substitutional Mn. The
expansion coeffcient of interstitial Mn estimated from our data is consistent
with theory predictions. The concentration of interstitial Mn and the
corresponding lattice expansion of the epilayer are reduced by annealing,
accompanied by an increase of the density of randomly distributed Mn atoms in
the disordered surface layer. Substitutional Mn atoms remain stable during the
low-temperature annealing.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
Fast optical control of spin in semiconductor interfacial structures
We report on a picosecond-fast optical removal of spin polarization from a
self-confined photo-carrier system at an undoped GaAs/AlGaAs interface
possessing superior long-range and high-speed spin transport properties. We
employed a modified resonant spin amplification technique with unequal
intensities of subsequent pump pulses to experimentally distinguish the
evolution of spin populations originating from different excitation laser
pulses. We demonstrate that the density of spins, which is injected into the
system by means of the optical orientation, can be controlled by reducing the
electrostatic confinement of the system using an additional generation of
photocarriers. It is also shown that the disturbed confinement recovers within
hundreds of picoseconds after which spins can be again photo-injected into the
system
Molecular Beam Epitaxy of LiMnAs
We report on the molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) growth of high crystalline
quality LiMnAs. The introduction of a group-I alkali metal element Li with flux
comparable to fluxes of Mn and As has not caused any apparent damage to the MBE
system after as many as fifteen growth cycles performed on the system to date.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Aharonov-Casher effect in a two dimensional hole gas with spin-orbit interaction
We study the quantum interference effects induced by the Aharonov-Casher
phase in a ring structure in a two-dimensional heavy hole (HH) system with
spin-orbit interaction realizable in narrow asymmetric quantum wells. The
influence of the spin-orbit interaction strength on the transport is
investigated analytically. These analytical results allow us to explain the
interference effects as a signature of the Aharonov-Casher Berry phases. Unlike
previous studies on the electron two-dimensional Rashba systems, we find that
the frequency of conductance modulations as a function of the spin-orbit
strength is not constant but increases for larger spin-orbit splittings. In the
limit of thin channel rings (width smaller than Fermi wavelength), we find that
the spin-orbit splitting can be greatly increased due to quantization in the
radial direction. We also study the influence of magnetic field considering
both limits of small and large Zeeman splittings.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Boltzmann theory of engineered anisotropic magnetoresistance in (Ga,Mn)As
We report on a theoretical study of dc transport coefficients in (Ga,Mn)As
diluted magnetic semiconductor ferromagnets that accounts for quasiparticle
scattering from ionized Mn acceptors with a local moment and
from non-magnetic compensating defects. In metallic samples Boltzmann transport
theory with Golden rule scattering rates accounts for the principle trends of
the measured difference between resistances for magnetizations parallel and
perpendicular to the current. We predict that the sign and magnitude of the
anisotropic magnetoresistance can be changed by strain engineering or by
altering chemical composition.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
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