Sample records for variable temperature hall

  1. Novel High Speed Devices and Heterostructures Prepared by Molecular Beam Epitaxy

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1989-02-13

    GaSb/GaAs system was reported from the results of photoreflectance measurements : w ereport a heavy-hole band offset s5; 1.7 for GaAs.g9bd.,, establishing...studied by variable temperature Hall measurements . For the GaA# 1_hb# material grown on InP, a two-acceptor model was forwarded to describe the Hall...Meanwhile, from Hall measurements , room temperature electron mobilities as high as 57000 m./Vs were reported in a 4.6 & thick unintentionally-doped InSb

  2. Hall effect of copper nitride thin films

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Yue, G. H.; Liu, J. Z.; Li, M.; Yuan, X. M.; Yan, P. X.; Liu, J. L.

    2005-08-01

    The Hall effect of copper nitride (Cu3N) thin films was investigated in our work. Cu3N films were deposited on glass substrates by radio-frequency (RF) magnetron sputtering at different temperatures using pure copper as the sputtering target. The Hall coefficients of the films are demonstrated to be dependent on the deposition gas flow rate and the measuring temperature. Both the Hall coefficient and resistance of the Cu3N films increase with the nitrogen gas flow rate at room temperature, while the Hall mobility and the carrier density of the films decrease. As the temperature changed from 100 K to 300 K, the Hall coefficient and the resistivity of the films decreased, while the carrier density increased and Hall mobility shows no great change. The energy band gap of the Cu3N films deduced from the curve of the common logarithm of the Hall coefficient against 1/T is 1.17-1.31 eV.

  3. Reduced Spin Hall Effects from Magnetic Proximity.

    DOE PAGES

    Zhang, Wei; Jungfleisch, Matthias B.; Jiang, Wanjun; ...

    2015-03-26

    We investigate temperature-dependent spin pumping and inverse spin Hall effects in thin Pt and Pd in contact with Permalloy. Our experiments show a decrease of the spin Hall effect with decreasing temperature, which is attributed to a temperature-dependent proximity effect. The spin Hall angle decreases from 0.086 at room temperature to 0.042 at 10 K for Pt and is nearly negligible at 10 K for Pd. By first-principle calculations, we show that the spin Hall conductivity indeed reduces by increasing the proximity-induced spin magnetic moments for both Pt and Pd. This work highlights the important role of proximity-induced magnetic orderingmore » to spin Hall phenomena in Pt and Pd.« less

  4. Air temperature gradient in large industrial hall

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Karpuk, Michał; Pełech, Aleksander; Przydróżny, Edward; Walaszczyk, Juliusz; Szczęśniak, Sylwia

    2017-11-01

    In the rooms with dominant sensible heat load, volume airflow depends on many factors incl. pre-established temperature difference between exhaust and supply airflow. As the temperature difference is getting higher, airflow volume drops down, consequently, the cost of AHU is reduced. In high industrial halls with air exhaust grids located under the ceiling additional temperature gradient above working zone should be taken into consideration. In this regard, experimental research of the vertical air temperature gradient in high industrial halls were carried out for the case of mixing ventilation system The paper presents the results of air temperature distribution measurements in high technological hall (mechanically ventilated) under significant sensible heat load conditions. The supply airflow was delivered to the hall with the help of the swirl diffusers while exhaust grids were located under the hall ceiling. Basing on the air temperature distribution measurements performed on the seven pre-established levels, air temperature gradient in the area between 2.0 and 7.0 m above the floor was calculated and analysed.

  5. Probing the thermal Hall effect using miniature capacitive strontium titanate thermometry

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Tinsman, Colin; Li, Gang; Asaba, Tomoya

    2016-06-27

    The thermal Hall effect is the thermal analog of the electrical Hall effect. Rarely observed in normal metals, thermal Hall signals have been argued to be a key property for a number of strongly correlated materials, such as high temperature superconductors, correlated topological insulators, and quantum magnets. The observation of the thermal Hall effect requires precise measurement of temperature in intense magnetic fields. Particularly at low temperature, resistive thermometers have a strong dependence on field, which makes them unsuitable for this purpose. We have created capacitive thermometers which instead measure the dielectric constant of strontium titanate (SrTiO{sub 3}). SrTiO{sub 3}more » approaches a ferroelectric transition, causing its dielectric constant to increase by a few orders of magnitude at low temperature. As a result, these thermometers are very sensitive at low temperature while having very little dependence on the applied magnetic field, making them ideal for thermal Hall measurements. We demonstrate this method by making measurements of the thermal Hall effect in Bismuth in magnetic fields of up to 10 T.« less

  6. Coherence length saturation at the low temperature limit in two-dimensional hole gas

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Shan, Pujia; Fu, Hailong; Wang, Pengjie; Yang, Jixiang; Pfeiffer, L. N.; West, K. W.; Lin, Xi

    2018-05-01

    The plateau-plateau transition in the integer quantum Hall effect is studied in three Hall bars with different widths. The slopes of the Hall resistance as a function of magnetic field follow the scaling power law as expected in the plateau-plateau transition, and saturate at the low temperature limit. Surprisingly, the saturation temperature is irrelevant with the Hall bar size, which suggests that the saturation of the coherence length is intrinsic.

  7. Spontaneous Hall effects in the electron system at the SmTiO3/EuTiO3 interface

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ahadi, Kaveh; Kim, Honggyu; Stemmer, Susanne

    2018-05-01

    Magnetotransport and magnetism of epitaxial SmTiO3/EuTiO3 heterostructures grown by molecular beam epitaxy are investigated. It is shown that the polar discontinuity at the interface introduces ˜3.9 × 1014 cm-2 carriers into the EuTiO3. The itinerant carriers exhibit two distinct contributions to the spontaneous Hall effect. The anomalous Hall effect appears despite a very small magnetization, indicating a non-collinear spin structure, and the second contribution resembles a topological Hall effect. Qualitative differences exist in the temperature dependence of both Hall effects when compared to uniformly doped EuTiO3. In particular, the topological Hall effect contribution appears at higher temperatures and the anomalous Hall effect shows a sign change with temperature. The results suggest that interfaces can be used to tune topological phenomena in itinerant magnetic systems.

  8. Temperature Dependence of the Spin-Hall Conductivity of a Two-Dimensional Impure Rashba Electron Gas in the Presence of Electron-Phonon and Electron-Electron Interactions

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Yavari, H.; Mokhtari, M.; Bayervand, A.

    2015-03-01

    Based on Kubo's linear response formalism, temperature dependence of the spin-Hall conductivity of a two-dimensional impure (magnetic and nonmagnetic impurities) Rashba electron gas in the presence of electron-electron and electron-phonon interactions is analyzed theoretically. We will show that the temperature dependence of the spin-Hall conductivity is determined by the relaxation rates due to these interactions. At low temperature, the elastic lifetimes ( and are determined by magnetic and nonmagnetic impurity concentrations which are independent of the temperature, while the inelastic lifetimes ( and related to the electron-electron and electron-phonon interactions, decrease when the temperature increases. We will also show that since the spin-Hall conductivity is sensitive to temperature, we can distinguish the intrinsic and extrinsic contributions.

  9. Investigation of linearity of the ITER outer vessel steady-state magnetic field sensors at high temperature

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Entler, S.; Duran, I.; Kocan, M.; Vayakis, G.

    2017-07-01

    Three vacuum vessel sectors in ITER will be instrumented by the outer vessel steady-state magnetic field sensors. Each sensor unit features a pair of metallic Hall sensors with a sensing layer made of bismuth to measure tangential and normal components of the local magnetic field. The influence of temperature and magnetic field on the Hall coefficient was tested for the temperature range from 25 to 250 oC and the magnetic field range from 0 to 0.5 T. A fit of the Hall coefficient normalized temperature function independent of magnetic field was found, and a model of the Hall coefficient functional dependence at a wide range of temperature and magnetic field was built with the purpose to simplify the calibration procedure.

  10. Characterization of n-Type and p-Type Long-Wave InAs/InAsSb Superlattices

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Brown, A. E.; Baril, N.; Zuo, D.; Almeida, L. A.; Arias, J.; Bandara, S.

    2017-09-01

    The influence of dopant concentration on both in-plane mobility and minority carrier lifetime in long-wave infrared InAs/InAsSb superlattices (SLs) was investigated. Unintentially doped ( n-type) and various concentrations of Be-doped ( p-type) SLs were characterized using variable-field Hall and photoconductive decay techniques. Minority carrier lifetimes in p-type InAs/InAsSb SLs are observed to decrease with increasing carrier concentration, with the longest lifetime at 77 K determined to be 437 ns, corresponding to a measured carrier concentration of p 0 = 4.1 × 1015 cm-3. Variable-field Hall technique enabled the extraction of in-plane hole, electron, and surface electron transport properties as a function of temperature. In-plane hole mobility is not observed to change with doping level and increases with reducing temperature, reaching a maximum at the lowest temperature measured of 30 K. An activation energy of the Be-dopant is determined to be 3.5 meV from Arrhenius analysis of hole concentration. Minority carrier electrons populations are suppressed at the highest Be-doping levels, but mobility and concentration values are resolved in lower-doped samples. An average surface electron conductivity of 3.54 × 10-4 S at 30 K is determined from the analysis of p-type samples. Effects of passivation treatments on surface conductivity will be presented.

  11. Chills

    MedlinePlus

    ... Accessed February 20, 2017. Hall JE. Body temperature regulation and fever. In: Hall JE, ed. Guyton and Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology . 13th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier; 2016:chap 74. ...

  12. Characterization of background carriers in InAs/GaSb quantum well

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Li, Junbin; Wu, Xiaoguang; Wang, Guowei

    2016-03-07

    The origin of the background carriers in an undoped InAs/GaSb quantum well (QW) at temperatures between 40 K and 300 K has been investigated using conventional Hall measurements. It is found that the Hall coefficient changes its sign at around 200 K, indicating that both electrons and holes exist in the quantum well. The two-carrier Hall model is thus adopted to analyze the Hall data, which enables the temperature dependence of the carrier density to be obtained. It is found that considerable numbers of holes exist under low temperature conditions (<40 K) in the InAs/GaSb QW, and the hole density is one to twomore » orders higher than that of the electrons within the experimental temperature range. The origin of these low temperature holes and the temperature-dependent behavior of the carrier density over the entire experimental temperature range are then discussed.« less

  13. Thermal Hall conductivity in the spin-triplet superconductor with broken time-reversal symmetry

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Imai, Yoshiki; Wakabayashi, Katsunori; Sigrist, Manfred

    2017-01-01

    Motivated by the spin-triplet superconductor Sr2RuO4 , the thermal Hall conductivity is investigated for several pairing symmetries with broken time-reversal symmetry. In the chiral p -wave phase with a fully opened quasiparticle excitation gap, the temperature dependence of the thermal Hall conductivity has a temperature linear term associated with the topological property directly and an exponential term, which shows a drastic change around the Lifshitz transition. Examining f -wave states as alternative candidates with d =Δ0z ̂(kx2-ky2) (kx±i ky) and Δ0z ̂kxky(kx±i ky) with gapless quasiparticle excitations, we study the temperature dependence of the thermal Hall conductivity, where for the former state the thermal Hall conductivity has a quadratic dependence on temperature, originating from the linear dispersions, in addition to linear and exponential behavior. The obtained result may enable us to distinguish between the chiral p -wave and f -wave states in Sr2RuO4 .

  14. Fractional quantum Hall effect at Landau level filling ν = 4/11

    DOE PAGES

    Pan, W.; Baldwin, K. W.; West, K. W.; ...

    2015-01-09

    In this study, we report low temperature electronic transport results on the fractional quantum Hall effect of composite fermions at Landau level filling ν = 4/11 in a very high mobility and low density sample. Measurements were carried out at temperatures down to 15mK, where an activated magnetoresistance R xx and a quantized Hall resistance R xy, within 1% of the expected value of h/(4/11)e 2, were observed. The temperature dependence of the R xx minimum at 4/11 yields an activation energy gap of ~ 7 mK. Developing Hall plateaus were also observed at the neighboring states at ν =more » 3/8 and 5/13.« less

  15. Hall viscosity of a chiral two-orbital superconductor at finite temperatures

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Yazdani-Hamid, Meghdad; Shahzamanian, Mohammad Ali

    2018-06-01

    The Hall viscosity known as the anti-symmetric part of the viscosity fourth-rank tensor. Such dissipationless response which appears for systems with broken time reversal symmetry. We calculate this non-dissipative quantity for a chiral two-orbital superconductor placed in a viscoelastic magnetic field using the linear response theory and apply our calculations to the putative multiband chiral superconductor Sr2RuO4. The chirality origin of a multiband superconductor arises from the interorbital coupling of the superconducting state. This feature leads to the robustness of the Hall viscosity against temperature and impurity effects. We study the temperature effect on the Hall viscosity at the one-loop approximation.

  16. Applying Energy Conservation Retrofits to Standard Army Buildings: Project Design and Initial Energy Data

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1988-07-01

    Window Area 33 24 New Exterior Doors of Dining Hall 34 25 New Window Panels of Dining Hall 34 I 26 New Pneumatic Reset Controllers of Dining Hall 35 27...of conditioned air that is exhausted from the building soace during hood operation. HW temperature reset A new heating system controller from Taylor...to be as high. The converse is true as outdoor temperatures get colder. Resetting the temperature of the heating hot water with changes in the outdoor

  17. Hole mobilities and the effective Hall factor in p-type GaAs

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Wenzel, M.; Irmer, G.; Monecke, J.; Siegel, W.

    1997-06-01

    We prove the effective Hall factor in p-GaAs to be larger than values discussed in the literature up to now. The scattering rates for the relevant scattering mechanisms in p-GaAs have been recalculated after critical testing the existing models. These calculations allow to deduce theoretical drift and theoretical Hall mobilities as functions of temperature which can be compared with measured data. Theoretical Hall factors in the heavy and light hole bands and an effective Hall factor result. The calculated room temperature values of the drift mobility and of the effective Hall factor are 118 cm2/V s and 3.6, respectively. The fitted acoustic deformation potential E1=7.9 eV and the fitted optical coupling constant DK=1.24×1011 eV/m are close to values published before. It is shown that the measured strong dependence of the Hall mobility on the Hall concentration is not mainly caused by scattering by ionized impurities but by the dependence of the effective Hall factor on the hole concentration.

  18. Experiments on Quantum Hall Topological Phases in Ultra Low Temperatures

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Du, Rui-Rui

    2015-02-14

    This project is to cool electrons in semiconductors to extremely low temperatures and to study new states of matter formed by low-dimensional electrons (or holes). At such low temperatures (and with an intense magnetic field), electronic behavior differs completely from ordinary ones observed at room temperatures or regular low temperature. Studies of electrons at such low temperatures would open the door for fundamental discoveries in condensed matter physics. Present studies have been focused on topological phases in the fractional quantum Hall effect in GaAs/AlGaAs semiconductor heterostructures, and the newly discovered (by this group) quantum spin Hall effect in InAs/GaSb materials.more » This project consists of the following components: 1) Development of efficient sample cooling techniques and electron thermometry: Our goal is to reach 1 mK electron temperature and reasonable determination of electron temperature; 2) Experiments at ultra-low temperatures: Our goal is to understand the energy scale of competing quantum phases, by measuring the temperature-dependence of transport features. Focus will be placed on such issues as the energy gap of the 5/2 state, and those of 12/5 (and possible 13/5); resistive signature of instability near 1/2 at ultra-low temperatures; 3) Measurement of the 5/2 gaps in the limit of small or large Zeeman energies: Our goal is to gain physics insight of 5/2 state at limiting experimental parameters, especially those properties concerning the spin polarization; 4) Experiments on tuning the electron-electron interaction in a screened quantum Hall system: Our goal is to gain understanding of the formation of paired fractional quantum Hall state as the interaction pseudo-potential is being modified by a nearby screening electron layer; 5) Experiments on the quantized helical edge states under a strong magnetic field and ultralow temperatures: our goal is to investigate both the bulk and edge states in a quantum spin Hall insulator under time-reversal symmetry-broken conditions.« less

  19. Evidence for phonon skew scattering in the spin Hall effect of platinum

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Karnad, G. V.; Gorini, C.; Lee, K.; Schulz, T.; Lo Conte, R.; Wells, A. W. J.; Han, D.-S.; Shahbazi, K.; Kim, J.-S.; Moore, T. A.; Swagten, H. J. M.; Eckern, U.; Raimondi, R.; Kläui, M.

    2018-03-01

    We measure and analyze the effective spin Hall angle of platinum in the low-residual resistivity regime by second-harmonic measurements of the spin-orbit torques for a multilayer of Pt |Co | AlOx . An angular-dependent study of the torques allows us to extract the effective spin Hall angle responsible for the damping-like torque in the system. We observe a strikingly nonmonotonic and reproducible temperature dependence of the torques. This behavior is compatible with recent theoretical predictions which include both intrinsic and extrinsic (impurities and phonons) contributions to the spin Hall effect at finite temperatures.

  20. Exposure and materiality of the secondary room and its impact on the impulse response of coupled-volume concert halls

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ermann, Michael; Johnson, Marty

    2005-06-01

    How does sound decay when one room is partially exposed to another (acoustically coupled)? More specifically, this research aims to quantify how operational and design decisions impact sound fields in the design of concert halls with acoustical coupling. By adding a second room to a concert hall, and designing doors to control the sonic transparency between the two rooms, designers can create a new, coupled acoustic. Concert halls use coupling to achieve a variable, longer, and distinct reverberant quality for their musicians and listeners. For this study a coupled-volume shoebox concert hall is conceived with a fixed geometric volume, form, and primary-room sound absorption. Aperture size and secondary-room sound absorption levels are established as variables. Statistical analysis of sound decay in this simulated hall suggests a highly sensitive relationship between the double-sloped condition and (1) architectural composition, as defined by the aperture size exposing the chamber and (2) materiality, as defined by the sound absorptance in the coupled volume. The theoretical, mathematical predictions are compared with coupled-volume concert hall field measurements and guidelines are suggested for future designs of coupled-volume concert halls.

  1. Hall effect in Ce/sub 1-x/Y/sub x/Pd/sub 3/ mixed-valence alloys

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Fert, A.; Pureur, P.; Hamzic, A.

    Mixed-valence and Kondo lattice systems exhibit large anomalous Hall coefficients with a striking change of sign at low temperature in several systems (CePd/sub 3/, CeCu/sub 6/,..., etc.). We have studied the Hall effect of Ce/sub 1-x/Y/sub x/Pd/sub 3/, in which the substitution of small amounts of Y for Ce prevents the development of coherence at low temperature. We find that the Hall coefficient does not change its sign at low temperature and can be well understood in the one-impurity model of Ramakrishnan, Coleman, and Anderson. We infer that the change of sign observed in CePd/sub 3/ is an effect ofmore » coherence.« less

  2. Observation of the Zero Hall Plateau in a Quantum Anomalous Hall Insulator

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Feng, Yang; Feng, Xiao; Ou, Yunbo

    We report experimental investigations on the quantum phase transition between the two opposite Hall plateaus of a quantum anomalous Hall insulator. We observe a well-defined plateau with zero Hall conductivity over a range of magnetic field around coercivity when the magnetization reverses. The features of the zero Hall plateau are shown to be closely related to that of the quantum anomalous Hall effect, but its temperature evolution exhibits a significant difference from the network model for a conventional quantum Hall plateau transition. We propose that the chiral edge states residing at the magnetic domain boundaries, which are unique to amore » quantum anomalous Hall insulator, are responsible for the novel features of the zero Hall plateau.« less

  3. Sign reversal of Hall signals in Tm3Fe5O12 /Pt with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Liu, Yawen; Tang, Chi; Xu, Yadong; Shi, Zhong; Shi, Jing

    Robust interface strain-induced perpendicular magnetic anisotropy is produced in atomically flat ferromagnetic insulator Tm3Fe5O12 (TIG) films grown with pulsed laser deposition on both substituted-Gd3Ga5O12 and Nd3Ga5O12 (NGG). In TIG/Pt bilayers, we observe large hysteresis loops over a wide range of Pt thicknesses and temperatures. Both the ordinary Hall effect and anomalous Hall effect undergo a sign reversal as the temperature is lowered. The temperature dependence of the Hall signals in bilayers with different thickness of Pt indicates the existence of exchange interaction at the interface. Our results provide a clue to further understand the origin of the anomalous Hall effect in ferromagnetic insulator/normal metal bilayer systems. The work was supported as part of the SHINES, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the US Department of Energy, BES under Award No. SC0012670.

  4. Topological insulator thin films starting from the amorphous phase-Bi{sub 2}Se{sub 3} as example

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Barzola-Quiquia, J., E-mail: j.barzola@physik.uni-leipzig.de; Lehmann, T.; Stiller, M.

    We present a new method to obtain topological insulator Bi{sub 2}Se{sub 3} thin films with a centimeter large lateral length. To produce amorphous Bi{sub 2}Se{sub 3} thin films, we have used a sequential flash-evaporation method at room temperature. Transmission electron microscopy has been used to verify that the prepared samples are in a pure amorphous state. During annealing, the samples transform into the rhombohedral Bi{sub 2}Se{sub 3} crystalline structure which was confirmed using X-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy. Resistance measurements of the amorphous films show the expected Mott variable range hopping conduction process with a high specific resistance compared tomore » the one obtained in the crystalline phase (metallic behavior). We have measured the magnetoresistance and the Hall effect at different temperatures between 2 K and 275 K. At temperatures T ≲ 50 K and fields B ≲ 1 T, we observe weak anti-localization in the MR; the Hall measurements confirm the n-type character of the samples. All experimental results of our films are in quantitative agreement with results from samples prepared using more sophisticated methods.« less

  5. Determination of intrinsic spin Hall angle in Pt

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Wang, Yi; Deorani, Praveen; Qiu, Xuepeng

    2014-10-13

    The spin Hall angle in Pt is evaluated in Pt/NiFe bilayers by spin torque ferromagnetic resonance measurements and is found to increase with increasing the NiFe thickness. To extract the intrinsic spin Hall angle in Pt by estimating the total spin current injected into NiFe from Pt, the NiFe thickness dependent measurements are performed and the spin diffusion in the NiFe layer is taken into account. The intrinsic spin Hall angle of Pt is determined to be 0.068 at room temperature and is found to be almost constant in the temperature range of 13–300 K.

  6. Large anomalous Hall effect in a non-collinear antiferromagnet Mn3Sn at room temperature

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Higo, Tomoya; Kiyohara, Naoki; Nakatsuji, Satoru

    Recent development in theoretical and experimental studies have provided a framework for understanding the anomalous Hall effect using Berry-phase concepts, and this perspective has led to predictions that, under certain conditions, a large anomalous Hall effect may appear in spin liquids and antiferromagnets. In this talk, we will present experimental results showing that the antiferromagnet Mn3Sn, which has a non-collinear 120-degree spin order, exhibits a large anomalous Hall effect. The magnitude of the Hall conductivity is ~ 20 Ω-1 cm-1 at room temperature and > 100 Ω-1 cm-1 at low temperatures. We found that a main component of the Hall signal, which is nearly independent of a magnetic field and magnetization, can change the sign with the reversal of a small applied field, corresponding to the rotation of the staggered moments of the non-collinear antiferromagnetic spin order which carries a very small net moment of a few of mμB. Supported by PRESTO, JST, and Grants-in-Aid for Program for Advancing Strategic International Networks to Accelerate the Circulation of Talented Researchers (No. R2604) and Scientific Research on Innovative Areas (15H05882 and 15H05883) from JSPS.

  7. Hall effects on peristaltic flow of couple stress fluid in a vertical asymmetric channel

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Maninaga Kumar, P.; Kavitha, A.; Saravana, R.

    2017-11-01

    The influence of Hall effect on peristaltic transport of a couple stress fluid in a vertical asymmetric channel is examined. The problem is solved under the assumptions of low Reynolds number and long wavelength. The velocity, temperature and concentration are obtained by using analytical solutions. Effect of Hall parameter, couple stress fluid parameter, Froude number, Hartmann number and the phase difference on the pumping characteristics, temperature and concentration are discussed graphically.

  8. Large anomalous Hall effect driven by a nonvanishing Berry curvature in the noncolinear antiferromagnet Mn3Ge.

    PubMed

    Nayak, Ajaya K; Fischer, Julia Erika; Sun, Yan; Yan, Binghai; Karel, Julie; Komarek, Alexander C; Shekhar, Chandra; Kumar, Nitesh; Schnelle, Walter; Kübler, Jürgen; Felser, Claudia; Parkin, Stuart S P

    2016-04-01

    It is well established that the anomalous Hall effect displayed by a ferromagnet scales with its magnetization. Therefore, an antiferromagnet that has no net magnetization should exhibit no anomalous Hall effect. We show that the noncolinear triangular antiferromagnet Mn3Ge exhibits a large anomalous Hall effect comparable to that of ferromagnetic metals; the magnitude of the anomalous conductivity is ~500 (ohm·cm)(-1) at 2 K and ~50 (ohm·cm)(-1) at room temperature. The angular dependence of the anomalous Hall effect measurements confirms that the small residual in-plane magnetic moment has no role in the observed effect except to control the chirality of the spin triangular structure. Our theoretical calculations demonstrate that the large anomalous Hall effect in Mn3Ge originates from a nonvanishing Berry curvature that arises from the chiral spin structure, and that also results in a large spin Hall effect of 1100 (ħ/e) (ohm·cm)(-1), comparable to that of platinum. The present results pave the way toward the realization of room temperature antiferromagnetic spintronics and spin Hall effect-based data storage devices.

  9. Specific features of electron scattering in uniaxially deformed n-Ge single crystals in the presence of radiation defects

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Luniov, S. V.; Zimych, A. I.; Nazarchuk, P. F.; Maslyuk, V. T.; Megela, I. G.

    2016-12-01

    Temperature dependencies for concentration of electrons and the Hall mobility for unirradiated and irradiated by the flow of electrons ? single crystals ?, with the energy of ?, for different values of uniaxial pressures along the crystallographic directions ?, ? and ? are obtained on the basis of piezo-Hall effect measurements. Non-typical growth of the Hall mobility of electrons for irradiated single crystals ? in comparison with unirradiated with the increasing of value of uniaxial pressures along the crystallographic directions ? (for the entire range of the investigated temperatures) and ? (to temperatures ?) has been revealed. Such an effect of the Hall mobility increase for uniaxially deformed single crystals ? is explained by the reduction of gradients of a resistance as a result of reduction in the amplitude of a large-scale potential with deformation and concentration of charged A-centers in the process of their recharge by the increasing of uniaxial pressure and consequently the probability of scattering on these centers. Theoretical calculations for temperature dependencies of the Hall mobility for uniaxially deformed single crystals ? in terms of the electrons scattering on the ions of shallow donors, acoustic, optical and intervalley phonons, regions of disordering and large-scale potential is good conformed to the corresponding experimental results at temperatures T<220 K for the case of uniaxial pressures along the crystallographic directions ? and ? and for temperatures ? when the uniaxial pressure is directed along the crystallographic directions ?. The mechanism of electron scattering on a charged radiation defects (which correspond to the deep energy levels of A-centers) 'is turned off' for the given temperatures due to the uniaxial pressure. Reduction of the Hall mobility in transition through a maximum of dependence ? with the increasing temperature for cases of the uniaxial deformation of the irradiated single crystals ? along the crystallographic directions ? and ? is explained by the deforming redistribution of electrons between the minima of conduction band of germanium with different mobility.

  10. Combined Influence of Hall Current and Soret Effect on Chemically Reacting Magnetomicropolar Fluid Flow from Radiative Rotating Vertical Surface with Variable Suction in Slip-Flow Regime

    PubMed Central

    Jain, Preeti

    2014-01-01

    An analysis study is presented to study the effects of Hall current and Soret effect on unsteady hydromagnetic natural convection of a micropolar fluid in a rotating frame of reference with slip-flow regime. A uniform magnetic field acts perpendicularly to the porous surface which absorbs the micropolar fluid with variable suction velocity. The effects of heat absorption, chemical reaction, and thermal radiation are discussed and for this Rosseland approximation is used to describe the radiative heat flux in energy equation. The entire system rotates with uniform angular velocity Ω about an axis normal to the plate. The nonlinear coupled partial differential equations are solved by perturbation techniques. In order to get physical insight, the numerical results of translational velocity, microrotation, fluid temperature, and species concentration for different physical parameters entering into the analysis are discussed and explained graphically. Also, the results of the skin-friction coefficient, the couple stress coefficient, Nusselt number, and Sherwood number are discussed with the help of figures for various values of flow pertinent flow parameters. PMID:27350957

  11. Selected Personality Variables of Students in Single-Sex and Coeducational Residence Halls.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Young, Donna; And Others

    Selected personality variables of college students who reside under different living arrangements were studied to determine the effect of student's type of housing, gender, and enrollment classification. A sample of students living in residential halls at Maryville College were administered the Attitude Toward Women Scale (ATWS), the Bem Sex Role…

  12. Temperature dependence of electrical characteristics of Pt/GaN Schottky diode fabricated by UHV e-beam evaporation.

    PubMed

    Kumar, Ashish; Arafin, Shamsul; Amann, Markus Christian; Singh, Rajendra

    2013-11-15

    Temperature-dependent electrical characterization of Pt/n-GaN Schottky barrier diodes prepared by ultra high vacuum evaporation has been done. Analysis has been made to determine the origin of the anomalous temperature dependence of the Schottky barrier height, the ideality factor, and the Richardson constant calculated from the I-V-T characteristics. Variable-temperature Hall effect measurements have been carried out to understand charge transport at low temperature. The modified activation energy plot from the barrier inhomogeneity model has given the value of 32.2 A/(cm2 K2) for the Richardson constant A** in the temperature range 200 to 380 K which is close to the known value of 26.4A/(cm2 K2) for n-type GaN.

  13. Warning system against locomotive driving wheel flaccidity

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Luo, Peng

    2014-09-01

    Causes of locomotive relaxation are discussed. Alarm system against locomotive driving wheel flaccidity is designed by means of techniques of infrared temperature measurement and Hall sensor measurement. The design scheme of the system, the principle of detecting locomotive driving wheel flaccidity with temperature and Hall sensor is introduced, threshold temperature of infrared alarm is determined. The circuit system is designed by microcontroller technology and the software is designed with the assembly language. The experiment of measuring the flaccid displacement with Hall sensor measurement is simulated. The results show that the system runs well with high reliability and low cost, which has a wide prospect of application and popularization.

  14. Non-Intrusive, Time-Resolved Hall Thruster Near-Field Electron Temperature Measurements

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2011-08-01

    With the growing interest in Hall thruster technology, comes the need to fully characterize the plasma dynamics that determine performance. Of...instabilities characteristic of Hall thruster behavior, time resolved techniques must be developed. This study presents a non-intrusive method of

  15. Graphene/Si CMOS Hybrid Hall Integrated Circuits

    PubMed Central

    Huang, Le; Xu, Huilong; Zhang, Zhiyong; Chen, Chengying; Jiang, Jianhua; Ma, Xiaomeng; Chen, Bingyan; Li, Zishen; Zhong, Hua; Peng, Lian-Mao

    2014-01-01

    Graphene/silicon CMOS hybrid integrated circuits (ICs) should provide powerful functions which combines the ultra-high carrier mobility of graphene and the sophisticated functions of silicon CMOS ICs. But it is difficult to integrate these two kinds of heterogeneous devices on a single chip. In this work a low temperature process is developed for integrating graphene devices onto silicon CMOS ICs for the first time, and a high performance graphene/CMOS hybrid Hall IC is demonstrated. Signal amplifying/process ICs are manufactured via commercial 0.18 um silicon CMOS technology, and graphene Hall elements (GHEs) are fabricated on top of the passivation layer of the CMOS chip via a low-temperature micro-fabrication process. The sensitivity of the GHE on CMOS chip is further improved by integrating the GHE with the CMOS amplifier on the Si chip. This work not only paves the way to fabricate graphene/Si CMOS Hall ICs with much higher performance than that of conventional Hall ICs, but also provides a general method for scalable integration of graphene devices with silicon CMOS ICs via a low-temperature process. PMID:24998222

  16. Graphene/Si CMOS hybrid hall integrated circuits.

    PubMed

    Huang, Le; Xu, Huilong; Zhang, Zhiyong; Chen, Chengying; Jiang, Jianhua; Ma, Xiaomeng; Chen, Bingyan; Li, Zishen; Zhong, Hua; Peng, Lian-Mao

    2014-07-07

    Graphene/silicon CMOS hybrid integrated circuits (ICs) should provide powerful functions which combines the ultra-high carrier mobility of graphene and the sophisticated functions of silicon CMOS ICs. But it is difficult to integrate these two kinds of heterogeneous devices on a single chip. In this work a low temperature process is developed for integrating graphene devices onto silicon CMOS ICs for the first time, and a high performance graphene/CMOS hybrid Hall IC is demonstrated. Signal amplifying/process ICs are manufactured via commercial 0.18 um silicon CMOS technology, and graphene Hall elements (GHEs) are fabricated on top of the passivation layer of the CMOS chip via a low-temperature micro-fabrication process. The sensitivity of the GHE on CMOS chip is further improved by integrating the GHE with the CMOS amplifier on the Si chip. This work not only paves the way to fabricate graphene/Si CMOS Hall ICs with much higher performance than that of conventional Hall ICs, but also provides a general method for scalable integration of graphene devices with silicon CMOS ICs via a low-temperature process.

  17. The electrical properties of 60 keV zinc ions implanted into semi-insulating gallium arsenide

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Littlejohn, M. A.; Anikara, R.

    1972-01-01

    The electrical behavior of zinc ions implanted into chromium-doped semiinsulating gallium arsenide was investigated by measurements of the sheet resistivity and Hall effect. Room temperature implantations were performed using fluence values from 10 to the 12th to 10 to the 15th power/sq cm at 60 keV. The samples were annealed for 30 minutes in a nitrogen atmosphere up to 800 C in steps of 200 C and the effect of this annealing on the Hall effect and sheet resistivity was studied at room temperature using the Van der Pauw technique. The temperature dependence of sheet resistivity and mobility was measured from liquid nitrogen temperature to room temperature. Finally, a measurement of the implanted profile was obtained using a layer removal technique combined with the Hall effect and sheet resistivity measurements.

  18. Lecture Hall and Learning Design: A Survey of Variables, Parameters, Criteria and Interrelationships for Audio-Visual Presentation Systems and Audience Reception.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Justin, J. Karl

    Variables and parameters affecting architectural planning and audiovisual systems selection for lecture halls and other learning spaces are surveyed. Interrelationships of factors are discussed, including--(1) design requirements for modern educational techniques as differentiated from cinema, theater or auditorium design, (2) general hall…

  19. A variational theory of Hall effect of Anderson lattice model: Application to colossal magnetoresistance manganites (Re1-x Ax MnO3)

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Panwar, Sunil; Kumar, Vijay; Singh, Ishwar

    2017-10-01

    An anomalous Hall constant RH has been observed in various rare earth manganites doped with alkaline earths namely Re1-xAxMnO3 (where Re = La, Pr, Nd etc., and A = Ca, Sr, Ba etc.) which exhibit colossal magnetoresistance (CMR), metal- insulator transition and many other poorly understood phenomena. We show that this phenomenon of anomalous Hall constant can be understood using two band (ℓ-b) Anderson lattice model Hamiltonian alongwith (ℓ-b) hybridization recently studied by us for manganites in the strong electron-lattice Jahn-Teller (JT) coupling regime an approach similar to the two - fluid models. We use a variational method in this work to study the temperature variation of Hall constant RH (T) in these compounds. We have already used this variational method to study the zero field electrical resistivity ρ (T) and magnetic susceptibility of doped CMR manganites. In the present study, we find that the Hall constant RH (T) reduces with increasing magnetic field parameters h&m and the metal-insulator transition temperature (Tρ) shifts towards higher temperature region. We have also observed the role of the model parameters e.g. local Coulomb repulsion U, Hund's rule coupling JH between eg spins and t2g spins, ferromagnetic nearest neighbor exchange coupling JF between t2g core spins and hybridization Vk between ℓ-polarons and d-electrons on Hall constant RH (T) of these materials at different magnetic fields. Here we find that RH (T) for a particular value of h and m shows a rapid initial increase, followed by a sharp peak at low temperature say 50 K in our case and a slow decrease at high temperatures, resembling with the key feature of many CMR compounds like La0.8Ba0.2 MnO3.The magnitude of RH (T) reduces and the anomaly (sharp peak) in RH becomes broader and shifts towards higher temperature region on increasing Vk or JH or doping x and even vanishes on further increasing these parameters. Our results of anomalous Hall constant (RH) have same qualitative behavior as the zero-field electrical resistivity. Moreover Hall Constant (RH) shows positive values indicating that the carriers in these manganites are holes.

  20. Hyperscaling violating black hole solutions and magneto-thermoelectric DC conductivities in holography

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ge, Xian-Hui; Tian, Yu; Wu, Shang-Yu; Wu, Shao-Feng

    2017-08-01

    We derive new black hole solutions in Einstein-Maxwell-axion-dilaton theory with a hyperscaling violation exponent. We then examine the corresponding anomalous transport exhibited by cuprate strange metals in the normal phase of high-temperature superconductors via gauge-gravity duality. Linear-temperature-dependence resistivity and quadratic-temperature-dependence inverse Hall angle can be achieved. In the high-temperature regime, the heat conductivity and Hall Lorenz ratio are proportional to the temperature. The Nernst signal first increases as temperature goes up, but it then decreases with increasing temperature in the high-temperature regime.

  1. Automated High-Temperature Hall-Effect Apparatus

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Parker, James B.; Zoltan, Leslie D.

    1992-01-01

    Automated apparatus takes Hall-effect measurements of specimens of thermoelectric materials at temperatures from ambient to 1,200 K using computer control to obtain better resolution of data and more data points about three times as fast as before. Four-probe electrical-resistance measurements taken in 12 electrical and 2 magnetic orientations to characterize specimens at each temperature. Computer acquires data, and controls apparatus via three feedback loops: one for temperature, one for magnetic field, and one for electrical-potential data.

  2. Hall effect in high- Tc Y 1Ba 2Cu 3O 7-δ superconductor

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Vezzoli, G. C.; Burke, T.; Moon, B. M.; Lalevic, B.; Safari, A.; Sundar, H. G. K.; Bonometti, R.; Alexander, C.; Rau, C.; Waters, K.

    1989-04-01

    We have performed point-by-point and continuous Hall effect experiments as a function of temperature in polycrystalline Y 1Ba 2Cu 3O 7-δ. We have shown that the positive Hall constant shows an abrupt increase upon decreasing temperature at a value just above Tc. This temperature corresponds to where the resistance versus temperature data deviates from linearity. At very high fields of 6.8 and 15 T we observe a subsequent decrease in RH. We interpret these data as supportive of a contribution toward the superconductivity mechanism arising from internal excitions or change transfer excitations such that the bound exciton concentration increases near Tc at the expense of positive carries which are reflected in both bound and free holes.

  3. Electrical transport properties of single-crystal CaB 6 , SrB 6 , and BaB 6

    DOE PAGES

    Stankiewicz, Jolanta; Rosa, Priscila F. S.; Schlottmann, Pedro; ...

    2016-09-22

    We measure the electrical resistivity and Hall effect of alkaline-earth-metal hexaboride single crystals as a function of temperature, hydrostatic pressure, and magnetic field. The transport properties vary weakly with the external parameters and are modeled in terms of intrinsic variable-valence defects. These defects can stay either in (1) delocalized shallow levels or in (2) localized levels resonant with the conduction band, which can be neutral or negatively charged. Satisfactory agreement is obtained for electronic transport properties in a broad temperature and pressure range, though fitting the magnetoresistance is less straightforward and a combination of various mechanisms is needed to explainmore » the field and temperature dependences.« less

  4. Electrical transport properties of single-crystal CaB 6 , SrB 6 , and BaB 6

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Stankiewicz, Jolanta; Rosa, Priscila F. S.; Schlottmann, Pedro

    We measure the electrical resistivity and Hall effect of alkaline-earth-metal hexaboride single crystals as a function of temperature, hydrostatic pressure, and magnetic field. The transport properties vary weakly with the external parameters and are modeled in terms of intrinsic variable-valence defects. These defects can stay either in (1) delocalized shallow levels or in (2) localized levels resonant with the conduction band, which can be neutral or negatively charged. Satisfactory agreement is obtained for electronic transport properties in a broad temperature and pressure range, though fitting the magnetoresistance is less straightforward and a combination of various mechanisms is needed to explainmore » the field and temperature dependences.« less

  5. Hall mobility and photoconductivity in TlGaSeS crystals

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Qasrawi, A. F.; Gasanly, N. M.

    2013-01-01

    In this work, the fundamental properties of the TlGaSeS single crystals are investigated by means of temperature dependent electrical resistivity and Hall mobility. The crystal photo-responsibility as function of illumination intensity and temperature is also tested in the temperature range of 350-160 K. The study allowed the determination of acceptor centers as 230 and 450 meV below and above 260 K, and recombination centers as 181, 363, and 10 meV at low, moderate, and high temperatures, respectively. While the temperature-dependent Hall mobility behaved abnormally, the photoconductivity analysis reflected an illumination intensity dependent recombination center. Namely, the recombination center increased from 10 to 90 meV as the light intensity increased from 27.9 to 76.7 mW cm-2, respectively. That strange behavior was attributed to the temporary shift in Fermi level caused by photoexcitation.

  6. An Inversion Method for Reconstructing Hall Thruster Plume Parameters from the Line Integrated Measurements (Preprint)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2007-06-05

    From - To) 05-06-2007 Technical Paper 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE 5a. CONTRACT NUMBER An Inversion Method for Reconstructing Hall Thruster Plume...239.18 An Inversion Method for Reconstructing Hall Thruster Plume Parameters from Line Integrated Measurements (Preprint) Taylor S. Matlock∗ Jackson...dimensional estimate of the plume electron temperature using a published xenon collisional radiative model. I. Introduction The Hall thruster is a high

  7. The electrical MHD and Hall current impact on micropolar nanofluid flow between rotating parallel plates

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Shah, Zahir; Islam, Saeed; Gul, Taza; Bonyah, Ebenezer; Altaf Khan, Muhammad

    2018-06-01

    The current research aims to examine the combined effect of magnetic and electric field on micropolar nanofluid between two parallel plates in a rotating system. The nanofluid flow between two parallel plates is taken under the influence of Hall current. The flow of micropolar nanofluid has been assumed in steady state. The rudimentary governing equations have been changed to a set of differential nonlinear and coupled equations using suitable similarity variables. An optimal approach has been used to acquire the solution of the modelled problems. The convergence of the method has been shown numerically. The impact of the Skin friction on velocity profile, Nusslet number on temperature profile and Sherwood number on concentration profile have been studied. The influences of the Hall currents, rotation, Brownian motion and thermophoresis analysis of micropolar nanofluid have been mainly focused in this work. Moreover, for comprehension the physical presentation of the embedded parameters that is, coupling parameter N1 , viscosity parameter Re , spin gradient viscosity parameter N2 , rotating parameter Kr , Micropolar fluid constant N3 , magnetic parameter M , Prandtl number Pr , Thermophoretic parameter Nt , Brownian motion parameter Nb , and Schmidt number Sc have been plotted and deliberated graphically.

  8. Hall Thruster Thermal Modeling and Test Data Correlation

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Myers, James; Kamhawi, Hani; Yim, John; Clayman, Lauren

    2016-01-01

    The life of Hall Effect thrusters are primarily limited by plasma erosion and thermal related failures. NASA Glenn Research Center (GRC) in cooperation with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) have recently completed development of a Hall thruster with specific emphasis to mitigate these limitations. Extending the operational life of Hall thursters makes them more suitable for some of NASA's longer duration interplanetary missions. This paper documents the thermal model development, refinement and correlation of results with thruster test data. Correlation was achieved by minimizing uncertainties in model input and recognizing the relevant parameters for effective model tuning. Throughout the thruster design phase the model was used to evaluate design options and systematically reduce component temperatures. Hall thrusters are inherently complex assemblies of high temperature components relying on internal conduction and external radiation for heat dispersion and rejection. System solutions are necessary in most cases to fully assess the benefits and/or consequences of any potential design change. Thermal model correlation is critical since thruster operational parameters can push some components/materials beyond their temperature limits. This thruster incorporates a state-of-the-art magnetic shielding system to reduce plasma erosion and to a lesser extend power/heat deposition. Additionally a comprehensive thermal design strategy was employed to reduce temperatures of critical thruster components (primarily the magnet coils and the discharge channel). Long term wear testing is currently underway to assess the effectiveness of these systems and consequently thruster longevity.

  9. High-Temperature Hall-Effect Apparatus

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Wood, C.; Lockwood, R. A.; Chemielewski, A. B.; Parker, J. B.; Zoltan, A.

    1985-01-01

    Compact furnace minimizes thermal gradients and electrical noise. Semiautomatic Hall-effect apparatus takes measurements on refractory semiconductors at temperatures as high as 1,100 degrees C. Intended especially for use with samples of high conductivity and low chargecarrier mobility that exhibit low signal-to-noise ratios, apparatus carefully constructed to avoid spurious electromagnetic and thermoelectric effects that further degrade measurements.

  10. Low temperature hall effect investigation of conducting polymer-carbon nanotubes composite network.

    PubMed

    Bahrami, Afarin; Talib, Zainal Abidin; Yunus, Wan Mahmood Mat; Behzad, Kasra; M Abdi, Mahnaz; Din, Fasih Ud

    2012-11-14

    Polypyrrole (PPy) and polypyrrole-carboxylic functionalized multi wall carbon nanotube composites (PPy/f-MWCNT) were synthesized by in situ chemical oxidative polymerization of pyrrole on the carbon nanotubes (CNTs). The structure of the resulting complex nanotubes was characterized by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and X-ray diffraction (XRD). The effects of f-MWCNT concentration on the electrical properties of the resulting composites were studied at temperatures between 100 K and 300 K. The Hall mobility and Hall coefficient of PPy and PPy/f-MWCNT composite samples with different concentrations of f-MWCNT were measured using the van der Pauw technique. The mobility decreased slightly with increasing temperature, while the conductivity was dominated by the gradually increasing carrier density.

  11. Energy-related environmental and economic performance analysis of two different types of electrically heated student residence halls

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Amber, Khuram Pervez; Aslam, Muhammad Waqar

    2018-03-01

    Student residence halls occupy 26% of the total area of a typical university campus in the UK and are directly responsible for 24% of university's annual CO2 emissions. Based on five years measured data, this paper aims to investigate the energy-related environmental and economic performance of electrically heated residence halls in which space heating is provided by two different types of electric heaters, that is, panel heater (PHT) and storage heater (SHT). Secondly, using statistical and machine learning methods, the paper attempts to investigate the relationship between daily electricity consumption and five factors (ambient temperature, solar radiation, relative humidity, wind speed and type of day). Data analysis revealed that electricity consumption of both halls is mainly driven by ambient temperature only, whereas SHT residence has 39% higher annual electricity bill and emits 70% higher CO2 emissions on a per square metre basis compared to the PHT residence hall.

  12. The Anomalous Hall Effect and Non-Equilibrium Transport

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ye, Fei

    1995-01-01

    This thesis contains three relatively independent research areas. In the first part of this thesis, the anomalous Hall effect of amorphous, high-resistance, Fe films (2 -10 monolayers thick) is investigated as a function of temperature. We find a logarithmic temperature dependence of the anomalous Hall resistance similar to the Coulomb anomaly of the resistance but twice its magnitude. The measurements are in excellent agreement with a theoretical calculation and provide us with an independent confirmation of the influence of the enhanced Coulomb interaction in disordered electron systems on transport properties. In the second part of the thesis, the nonequilibrium transport properties of metallic microstructures are studied. An electron beam lithography technique is used in making small structures. The electron temperature and phonon temperature are calculated. It is confirmed that the electron temperatures obtained from both thermometers (weak localization and the Coulomb anomaly) are consistent. It is also found that the phonon temperature in the film is considerably higher than the substrate temperature in the experiments. In addition, the dimensionality of the phonon system in the film is discussed, as well as the phonon escape time. In the third part, the magnetic behavior of V on Au films is studied. Weak localization and the anomalous Hall effect are used to investigate the magnetic properties of sub-mono, mono-, and multilayers of Vanadium on the surface of an Au film. Dilute V atoms possess a strong magnetic moment. For a monolayer the magnetic scattering is reduced by a factor of about 40. This suggests a strongly reduced moment of V compared with the dilute V coverage. From the anomalous Hall effect, it is concluded that the magnetic structure is anti-ferromagnetic; the moment per V atom in multilayers progressively diminishes but is still finite for 16 atomic layers of V. In Appendix A, the nonequilibrium distribution of the phonon system in a metal film is evaluated. The phonon escape time and the effective phonon temperature are calculated.

  13. Long-term variations and trends in the polar E-region

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Bjoland, L. M.; Ogawa, Y.; Hall, C.; Rietveld, M.; Løvhaug, U. P.; La Hoz, C.; Miyaoka, H.

    2017-10-01

    As the EISCAT UHF radar system in Northern Scandinavia started its operations in the early 1980s, the collected data cover about three solar cycles. These long time-series provide us the opportunity to study long-term variations and trends of ionospheric parameters in the high latitude region. In the present study we have used the EISCAT Tromsø UHF data to investigate variations of the Hall conductivity and ion temperatures in the E-region around noon. Both the ion temperature and the peak altitude of the Hall conductivity are confirmed to depend strongly on solar zenith angle. However, the dependence on solar activity seems to be weak. In order to search for trends in these parameters, the ion temperature and peak altitude of the Hall conductivity data were adjusted for their seasonal and solar cycle dependence. A very weak descent (∼0.2 km/ decade) was seen in the peak altitude of the Hall conductivity. The ion temperature at 110 km shows a cooling trend (∼10 K/ decade). However, other parameters than solar zenith angle and solar activity seem to affect the ion temperature at this altitude, and a better understanding of these parameters is necessary to derive a conclusive trend. In this paper, we discuss what may cause the characteristics of the variations in the electric conductivities and ion temperatures in the high latitude region.

  14. Electrical transport properties in Co nanocluster-assembled granular film

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Zhang, Qin-Fu; Wang, Lai-Sen; Wang, Xiong-Zhi; Zheng, Hong-Fei; Liu, Xiang; Xie, Jia; Qiu, Yu-Long; Chen, Yuanzhi; Peng, Dong-Liang

    2017-03-01

    A Co nanocluster-assembled granular film with three-dimensional cross-connection paralleled conductive paths was fabricated by using the plasma-gas-condensation method in a vacuum environment. The temperature-dependent longitudinal resistivity and anomalous Hall effect of this new type granular film were systematically studied. The longitudinal resistivity of the Co nanocluster-assembled granular film first decreased and then increased with increasing measuring temperature, revealing a minimum value at certain temperature, T min . In a low temperature region ( T < T min ), the barrier between adjacent nanoclusters governed the electrical transport process, and the temperature coefficient of resistance (TCR) showed an insulator-type behavior. The thermal fluctuation-induced tunneling conduction progressively increased with increasing temperature, which led to a decrease in the longitudinal resistivity. In a high temperature region, the TCR showed a metallic-type behavior, which was primarily attributed to the temperature-dependent scattering. Different from the longitudinal resistivity behavior, the saturated anomalous Hall resistivity increased monotonically with increasing measuring temperature. The value of the anomalous Hall coefficient ( R S ) reached 2.3 × 10-9 (Ω cm)/G at 300 K, which was about three orders of magnitude larger than previously reported in blocky single-crystal Co [E. N. Kondorskii, Sov. Phys. JETP 38, 977 (1974)]. Interestingly, the scaling relation ( ρx y A ∝ ρx x γ ) between saturated anomalous Hall resistivity ( ρx y A ) and longitudinal resistivity ( ρ x x ) was divided into two regions by T min . However, after excluding the contribution of tunneling, the scaling relation followed the same rule. The corresponding physical mechanism was also proposed to explain these phenomena.

  15. Nontrivial transition of transmission in a highly open quantum point contact in the quantum Hall regime

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Hong, Changki; Park, Jinhong; Chung, Yunchul; Choi, Hyungkook; Umansky, Vladimir

    2017-11-01

    Transmission through a quantum point contact (QPC) in the quantum Hall regime usually exhibits multiple resonances as a function of gate voltage and high nonlinearity in bias. Such behavior is unpredictable and changes sample by sample. Here, we report the observation of a sharp transition of the transmission through an open QPC at finite bias, which was observed consistently for all the tested QPCs. It is found that the bias dependence of the transition can be fitted to the Fermi-Dirac distribution function through universal scaling. The fitted temperature matches quite nicely to the electron temperature measured via shot-noise thermometry. While the origin of the transition is unclear, we propose a phenomenological model based on our experimental results that may help to understand such a sharp transition. Similar transitions are observed in the fractional quantum Hall regime, and it is found that the temperature of the system can be measured by rescaling the quasiparticle energy with the effective charge (e*=e /3 ). We believe that the observed phenomena can be exploited as a tool for measuring the electron temperature of the system and for studying the quasiparticle charges of the fractional quantum Hall states.

  16. Origin of the low critical observing temperature of the quantum anomalous Hall effect in V-doped (Bi, Sb) 2Te 3 film

    DOE PAGES

    Li, W.; Claassen, M.; Chang, Cui -Zu; ...

    2016-09-07

    The experimental realization of the quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) effect in magnetically-doped (Bi, Sb) 2Te 3 films stands out as a landmark of modern condensed matter physics. However, ultra-low temperatures down to few tens of mK are needed to reach the quantization of Hall resistance, which is two orders of magnitude lower than the ferromagnetic phase transition temperature of the films. Here, we systematically study the band structure of V-doped (Bi, Sb) 2Te 3 thin films by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) and show unambiguously that the bulk valence band (BVB) maximum lies higher in energy than the surface state Diracmore » point. Finally, our results demonstrate clear evidence that localization of BVB carriers plays an active role and can account for the temperature discrepancy.« less

  17. Anomalous Hall effect in calcium-doped lanthanum cobaltite and gadolinium

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Baily, Scott Alan

    The physical origin of the anomalous (proportional to magnetization) Hall effect is not very well understood. While many theories account for a Hall effect proportional to the magnetization of a material, these theories often predict effects significantly smaller than those found in ferromagnetic materials. An even more significant deficiency of the conventional theories is that they predict an anomalous Hall resistivity that is proportional to a power of the resistivity, and in the absence of a metal insulator transition cannot account for the anomalous Hall effect that peaks near TC. Recent models based on a geometric, or Berry, phase have had a great deal of success describing the anomalous Hall effect in double-exchange systems (e.g., lanthanum manganite and chromium dioxide). In gadolinium, as in double-exchange magnets, the exchange interaction is mediated by the conduction electrons and the anomalous Hall effect may therefore resemble that of CrO2 and other metallic double-exchange ferromagnets. Lanthanum cobaltite is similar to manganite in many ways, but a strong double-exchange interaction is not present. Calcium-doped lanthanum cobaltite films were found to have the largest anomalous Hall effect of any ferromagnetic metal. The primary purpose of this study is to gain insight into the origin of the anomalous Hall effect with the hope that these theories can be extended to account for the effect in other materials. The Hall resistivity, magnetoresistance, and magnetization of a Gadolinium single crystal were measured in fields up to 30 T. Cobaltite films were grown via laser ablation and characterized by a variety of techniques. Hall resistivity, magnetoresistance, magnetization, and magnetothermopower of L 1-xCaxCoO3 samples with 0.15 < x < 0.4 were measured in fields up to 7 T. The Gd results suggest that Berry's phase contributes partially to the Hall effect near TC. Berry's phase theories hold promise for explaining the large anomalous Hall effect in La1-xCaxCoO3 near T C, but the material presents many additional complexities, including a unique low temperature magnetoresistance. At low temperature, the Hall effect may be best explained by spin-polarized carriers scattering off of orbital disorder in spin-ordered clusters.

  18. Roles of nonlocal conductivity on spin Hall angle measurement

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Chen, Kai; Zhang, Shufeng

    2017-10-01

    Spin Hall angle characterizes the rate of spin-charge current conversion and it has become one of the most important material parameters for spintronics physics and device application. A long-standing controversy is that the spin Hall angles for a given material measured by spin pumping and by spin Hall torque experiments are inconsistent and they could differ by as much as an order of magnitude. By using the linear response spin transport theory, we explicitly formulate the relation between the spin Hall angle and measured variables in different experiments. We find that the nonlocal conductivity inherited in the layered structure plays a key role to resolve conflicting values of the spin Hall angle. We provide a generalized scheme for extracting spin transport coefficients from experimental data.

  19. Observation of anomalous Hall effect in a non-magnetic two-dimensional electron system

    PubMed Central

    Maryenko, D.; Mishchenko, A. S.; Bahramy, M. S.; Ernst, A.; Falson, J.; Kozuka, Y.; Tsukazaki, A.; Nagaosa, N.; Kawasaki, M.

    2017-01-01

    Anomalous Hall effect, a manifestation of Hall effect occurring in systems without time-reversal symmetry, has been mostly observed in ferromagnetically ordered materials. However, its realization in high-mobility two-dimensional electron system remains elusive, as the incorporation of magnetic moments deteriorates the device performance compared to non-doped structure. Here we observe systematic emergence of anomalous Hall effect in various MgZnO/ZnO heterostructures that exhibit quantum Hall effect. At low temperatures, our nominally non-magnetic heterostructures display an anomalous Hall effect response similar to that of a clean ferromagnetic metal, while keeping a large anomalous Hall effect angle θAHE≈20°. Such a behaviour is consistent with Giovannini–Kondo model in which the anomalous Hall effect arises from the skew scattering of electrons by localized paramagnetic centres. Our study unveils a new aspect of many-body interactions in two-dimensional electron systems and shows how the anomalous Hall effect can emerge in a non-magnetic system. PMID:28300133

  20. Extremely correlated Fermi liquid theory of the t-J model in 2 dimensions: low energy properties

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Shastry, B. Sriram; Mai, Peizhi

    2018-01-01

    Low energy properties of the metallic state of the two-dimensional t-J model are presented for second neighbor hopping with hole-doping (t\\prime ≤slant 0) and electron-doping (t\\prime > 0), with various superexchange energy J. We use a closed set of equations for the Greens functions obtained from the extremely correlated Fermi liquid theory. These equations reproduce the known low energies features of the large U Hubbard model in infinite dimensions. The density and temperature dependent quasiparticle weight, decay rate and the peak spectral heights over the Brillouin zone are calculated. We also calculate the resistivity, Hall conductivity, Hall number and cotangent Hall angle. The spectral features display high thermal sensitivity at modest T for density n≳ 0.8, implying a suppression of the effective Fermi-liquid temperature by two orders of magnitude relative to the bare bandwidth. The cotangent Hall angle exhibits a T 2 behavior at low T, followed by an interesting kink at higher T. The Hall number exhibits strong renormalization due to correlations. Flipping the sign of t\\prime changes the curvature of the resistivity versus T curves between convex and concave. Our results provide a natural route for understanding the observed difference in the temperature dependent resistivity of strongly correlated electron-doped and hole-doped matter.

  1. Topological Defects in Double Exchange Materials and Anomalous Hall Resistance.

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Calderón, M. J.; Brey, L.

    2000-03-01

    Recently it has been proposed that the anomalous Hall effect observed in Double Exchange materials is due to Berry phase effects caused by carrier hopping in a nontrivial spins background (J.Ye et al.) Phys.Rev.Lett. 83, 3737 1999.In order to study this possibility we have performed Monte Carlo simulations of the Double Exchange model and we have computed, as a function of the temperature, the number of topological defects in the system and the internal gauge magnetic field associated with these defects. In the simplest Double Exchange model the gauge magnetic field is random, and its average value is zero. The inclusion in the problem of spin-orbit coupling privileges the opposite direction of the magnetization and an anomalous Hall resistance (AHR) effect arises. We have computed the AHR, and we have obtained its temperature dependence. In agreement with previous experiments we obtain that AHR increases exponentially at low temperature and presents a maximum at a temperature slightly higher than the critical temperature.

  2. Pilot study: Exposure and materiality of the secondary room and its impact in the impulse response of coupled-volume concert halls

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ermann, Michael; Johnson, Marty E.

    2002-05-01

    What does one room sound like when it is partially exposed to another (acoustically coupled)? More specifically, this research aims to quantify how operational and design decisions impact aural impressions in the design of concert halls with acoustical coupling. By adding a second room to a concert hall, and designing doors to control the sonic transparency between the two rooms, designers can create a new, coupled acoustic. Concert halls use coupling to achieve a variable, longer, and distinct reverberant quality for their musicians and listeners. For this study, a coupled-volume shoebox concert hall was conceived with a fixed geometric volume, form, and primary-room sound absorption. Aperture size and secondary-room sound-absorption levels were established as variables. Statistical analysis of sound decay in this simulated hall suggests a highly sensitive relationship between the double-sloped condition and (1) Architectural composition, as defined by the aperture size exposing the chamber and (2) Materiality, as defined by the sound absorbance in the coupled volume. Preliminary calculations indicate that the double-sloped sound decay condition only appears when the total aperture area is less than 1.5% of the total shoebox surface area and the average absorption coefficient of the coupled volume is less than 0.07.

  3. Anisotropic anomalous Hall effect in triangular itinerant ferromagnet Fe3GeTe2

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Wang, Yihao; Xian, Cong; Wang, Jian; Liu, Bingjie; Ling, Langsheng; Zhang, Lei; Cao, Liang; Qu, Zhe; Xiong, Yimin

    2017-10-01

    Magnetic frustrated materials are of great interest for their novel spin-dependent transport properties. We report an anisotropic anomalous Hall effect in the triangular itinerant ferromagnet Fe3GeTe2 . When the current flows along the a b plane, Fe3GeTe2 exhibits the conventional anomalous Hall effect below the Curie temperature Tc, which can be depicted by Karplus-Luttinger theory. On the other hand, the topological Hall effect shows up below Tc with current along the c axis. The enhancement of Hall resistivity can be attributed to the chiral effect during the spin-flop process.

  4. Enhanced thermoelectric response in the fractional quantum Hall effect

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Roura-Bas, Pablo; Arrachea, Liliana; Fradkin, Eduardo

    2018-02-01

    We study the linear thermoelectric response of a quantum dot embedded in a constriction of a quantum Hall bar with fractional filling factors ν =1 /m within Laughlin series. We calculate the figure of merit Z T for the maximum efficiency at a fixed temperature difference. We find a significant enhancement of this quantity in the fractional filling in relation to the integer-filling case, which is a direct consequence of the fractionalization of the electron in the fractional quantum Hall state. We present simple theoretical expressions for the Onsager coefficients at low temperatures, which explicitly show that Z T and the Seebeck coefficient increase with m .

  5. Magnetically Filtered Faraday Probe for Measuring the Ion Current Density Profile of a Hall Thruster

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2006-01-01

    Hall thruster is investigated. The MFFP is designed to eliminate the collection of low-energy, charge-exchange (CEX) ions by using a variable magnetic field as an ion filter. In this study, a MFFP, Faraday probe with a reduced acceptance angle (BFP), and nude Faraday probe are used to measure the ion current density profile of a 5 kW Hall thruster operating over the range of 300-500 V and 5-10 mg/s. The probes are evaluated on a xenon propellant Hall thruster in the University of Michigan Large Vacuum Test Facility at operating

  6. Experimental study of effect of magnetic field on anode temperature distribution in an ATON-type Hall thruster

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Liu, Jinwen; Li, Hong; Mao, Wei; Ding, Yongjie; Wei, Liqiu; Li, Jianzhi; Yu, Daren; Wang, Xiaogang

    2018-05-01

    The energy deposition caused by the absorption of electrons by the anode is an important cause of power loss in a Hall thruster. The resulting anode heating is dangerous, as it can potentially reduce the thruster lifetime. In this study, by considering the ring shape of the anode of an ATON-type Hall thruster, the effects of the magnetic field strength and gradient on the anode ring temperature distribution are studied via experimental measurement. The results show that the temperature distribution is not affected by changes in the magnetic field strength and that the position of the peak temperature is essentially unchanged; however, the overall temperature does not change monotonically with the increase of the magnetic field strength and is positively correlated with the change in the discharge current. Moreover, as the magnetic field gradient increases, the position of the peak temperature gradually moves toward the channel exit and the temperature tends to decrease as a whole, regardless of the discharge current magnitude; in any case, the position of the peak temperature corresponds exactly to the intersection of the magnetic field cusp with the anode ring. Further theoretical analysis shows that the electrons, coming from the ionization region, travel along two characteristic paths to reach the anode under the guidance of the cusped magnetic field configuration. The change of the magnetic field strength or gradient changes the transfer of momentum and energy of the electrons in these two paths, which is the main reason for the changes in the temperature and distribution. This study is instructive for matching the design of the ring-shaped anode and the cusp magnetic field of an ATON-type Hall thruster.

  7. Temperature Ddependence of Anomalous Hall Conductivity in Rashba-type Ferromagnets

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Sakuma, Akimasa

    2018-03-01

    We theoretically investigated the anomalous Hall conductivity (AHC) of Rashba-type ferromagnets at a finite temperature, taking into account spin fluctuation. We observed that the intrinsic AHC increases with increasing temperature. This can be understood from the characteristic nature of the spin chirality in the k-space, which increases with decreasing exchange splitting (EXS) when the spin-orbit interaction is much smaller than the EXS. The extrinsic part of the AHC also increases with temperature owing to the enhancement of the scattering strength of electrons due to the thermal fluctuation of the exchange field.

  8. Unusual Thermal Hall Effect in a Kitaev Spin Liquid Candidate α -RuCl3

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kasahara, Y.; Sugii, K.; Ohnishi, T.; Shimozawa, M.; Yamashita, M.; Kurita, N.; Tanaka, H.; Nasu, J.; Motome, Y.; Shibauchi, T.; Matsuda, Y.

    2018-05-01

    The Kitaev quantum spin liquid displays the fractionalization of quantum spins into Majorana fermions. The emergent Majorana edge current is predicted to manifest itself in the form of a finite thermal Hall effect, a feature commonly discussed in topological superconductors. Here we report on thermal Hall conductivity κx y measurements in α -RuCl3 , a candidate Kitaev magnet with the two-dimensional honeycomb lattice. In a spin-liquid (Kitaev paramagnetic) state below the temperature characterized by the Kitaev interaction JK/kB˜80 K , positive κx y develops gradually upon cooling, demonstrating the presence of highly unusual itinerant excitations. Although the zero-temperature property is masked by the magnetic ordering at TN=7 K , the sign, magnitude, and T dependence of κx y/T at intermediate temperatures follows the predicted trend of the itinerant Majorana excitations.

  9. B-periodic oscillations in the Hall-resistance induced by a dc-current-bias under combined microwave-excitation and dc-current bias in the GaAs/AlGaAs 2D system.

    PubMed

    Liu, Han-Chun; Reichl, C; Wegscheider, W; Mani, R G

    2018-05-18

    We report the observation of dc-current-bias-induced B-periodic Hall resistance oscillations and Hall plateaus in the GaAs/AlGaAs 2D system under combined microwave radiation- and dc bias excitation at liquid helium temperatures. The Hall resistance oscillations and plateaus appear together with concomitant oscillations also in the diagonal magnetoresistance. The periods of Hall and diagonal resistance oscillations are nearly identical, and source power (P) dependent measurements demonstrate sub-linear relationship of the oscillation amplitude with P over the span 0 < P ≤ 20 mW.

  10. Magnon Spin Nernst Effect in Antiferromagnets.

    PubMed

    Zyuzin, Vladimir A; Kovalev, Alexey A

    2016-11-18

    We predict that a temperature gradient can induce a magnon-mediated spin Hall response in an antiferromagnet with nontrivial magnon Berry curvature. We develop a linear response theory which gives a general condition for a Hall current to be well defined, even when the thermal Hall response is forbidden by symmetry. We apply our theory to a honeycomb lattice antiferromagnet and discuss a role of magnon edge states in a finite geometry.

  11. Magnon Spin Nernst Effect in Antiferromagnets

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Zyuzin, Vladimir A.; Kovalev, Alexey A.

    2016-11-01

    We predict that a temperature gradient can induce a magnon-mediated spin Hall response in an antiferromagnet with nontrivial magnon Berry curvature. We develop a linear response theory which gives a general condition for a Hall current to be well defined, even when the thermal Hall response is forbidden by symmetry. We apply our theory to a honeycomb lattice antiferromagnet and discuss a role of magnon edge states in a finite geometry.

  12. Suppression of the Hall number due to charge density wave order in high-Tc cuprates

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Sharma, Girish; Nandy, S.; Taraphder, A.; Tewari, Sumanta

    2018-05-01

    Understanding the pseudogap phase in hole-doped high-temperature cuprate superconductors remains a central challenge in condensed-matter physics. From a host of recent experiments there is now compelling evidence of translational-symmetry-breaking charge density wave (CDW) order in a wide range of doping inside this phase. Two distinct types of incommensurate charge order, bidirectional at zero or low magnetic fields and unidirectional at high magnetic fields close to the upper critical field Hc 2, have been reported so far in approximately the same doping range between p ≃0.08 and p ≃0.16 . In concurrent developments, recent high-field Hall experiments have also revealed two indirect but striking signatures of Fermi surface reconstruction in the pseudogap phase, namely, a sign change of the Hall coefficient to negative values at low temperatures in the intermediate range of hole doping and a rapid suppression of the positive Hall number without a change in sign near optimal doping p ˜0.19 . We show that the assumption of a unidirectional incommensurate CDW (with or without a coexisting weak bidirectional order) at high magnetic fields near optimal doping and the coexistence of both types of orders of approximately equal magnitude at high magnetic fields in the intermediate range of doping may help explain the striking behavior of the low-temperature Hall effect in the entire pseudogap phase.

  13. Development and Testing of High Current Hollow Cathodes for High Power Hall Thrusters

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Kamhawi, Hani; Van Noord, Jonathan

    2012-01-01

    NASA's Office of the Chief Technologist In-Space Propulsion project is sponsoring the testing and development of high power Hall thrusters for implementation in NASA missions. As part of the project, NASA Glenn Research Center is developing and testing new high current hollow cathode assemblies that can meet and exceed the required discharge current and life-time requirements of high power Hall thrusters. This paper presents test results of three high current hollow cathode configurations. Test results indicated that two novel emitter configurations were able to attain lower peak emitter temperatures compared to state-of-the-art emitter configurations. One hollow cathode configuration attained a cathode orifice plate tip temperature of 1132 degC at a discharge current of 100 A. More specifically, test and analysis results indicated that a novel emitter configuration had minimal temperature gradient along its length. Future work will include cathode wear tests, and internal emitter temperature and plasma properties measurements along with detailed physics based modeling.

  14. Spin Hall magnetoresistance in the non-collinear ferrimagnet GdIG close to the compensation temperature

    DOE PAGES

    Dong, Bo -Wen; Cramer, Joel; Ganzhorn, Kathrin; ...

    2017-12-14

    We investigate the spin Hall magnetoresistance (SMR) in a gadolinium iron garnet (GdIG)/platinum (Pt) heterostructure by angular dependent magnetoresistance measurements. The magnetic structure of the ferromagnetic insulator GdIG is non-collinear near the compensation temperature, while it is collinear far from the compensation temperature. In the collinear regime, the SMR signal in GdIG is consistent with the usualmore » $${\\rm si}{{{\\rm n}}^{2}}\\theta $$ relation well established in the collinear magnet yttrium iron garnet, with $$\\theta $$ the angle between magnetization and spin Hall spin polarization direction. In the non-collinear regime, both an SMR signal with inverted sign and a more complex angular dependence with four maxima are observed within one sweep cycle. The number of maxima as well as the relative strength of different maxima depend strongly on temperature and field strength. Lastly, our results evidence a complex SMR behavior in the non-collinear magnetic regime that goes beyond the conventional formalism developed for collinear magnetic structures.« less

  15. Spin Hall magnetoresistance in the non-collinear ferrimagnet GdIG close to the compensation temperature

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Dong, Bo -Wen; Cramer, Joel; Ganzhorn, Kathrin

    We investigate the spin Hall magnetoresistance (SMR) in a gadolinium iron garnet (GdIG)/platinum (Pt) heterostructure by angular dependent magnetoresistance measurements. The magnetic structure of the ferromagnetic insulator GdIG is non-collinear near the compensation temperature, while it is collinear far from the compensation temperature. In the collinear regime, the SMR signal in GdIG is consistent with the usualmore » $${\\rm si}{{{\\rm n}}^{2}}\\theta $$ relation well established in the collinear magnet yttrium iron garnet, with $$\\theta $$ the angle between magnetization and spin Hall spin polarization direction. In the non-collinear regime, both an SMR signal with inverted sign and a more complex angular dependence with four maxima are observed within one sweep cycle. The number of maxima as well as the relative strength of different maxima depend strongly on temperature and field strength. Lastly, our results evidence a complex SMR behavior in the non-collinear magnetic regime that goes beyond the conventional formalism developed for collinear magnetic structures.« less

  16. Incomplete Ionization of a 110 meV Unintentional Donor in Beta-Ga2O3 and its Effect on Power Devices (Postprint)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-10-16

    characterized via temperature dependent Hall effect measurements up to 1000 K and found to have a donor energy of 110 meV. The existence of the...unintentional donor is confirmed by temperature dependent admittance spectroscopy, with an activation energy of 131 meV determined via that technique, in...characterized via temperature dependent Hall effect measurements up to 1000 K and found to have a donor energy of 110 meV. The existence of the

  17. Temperature dependence of the enhanced inverse spin Hall voltage in Pt/Antiferromagnetic/ Y3Fe5O12

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Brangham, J. T.; Lee, A. J.; Cheng, Y.; Yu, S. S.; Dunsiger, S. R.; Page, M. R.; Hammel, P. C.; Yang, F. Y.

    The generation, propagation, and detection of spin currents are of intense interest in the field of spintronics. Spin current generation by FMR spin pumping using Y3Fe5O12 (YIG) and spin current detection by the inverse spin Hall effect (ISHE) in metals such as Pt have been well studied. This is due to YIG's exceptionally low damping and insulating behavior and the large spin Hall angle of Pt. Previously, our group showed that the ISHE voltages are significantly enhanced by adding a thin intermediate layer of an antiferromagnet (AFM) between Pt and YIG at room temperature. Recent theoretical work predicts a mechanism for this enhancement as well as the temperature dependence of the ISHE voltages of metal/AFM/YIG trilayers. The predictions show a maximum in the ISHE voltages for these systems near the magnetic phase transition temperature of the AFM. Here we present experimental results showing the temperature dependence for Pt/AFM/YIG structures with various AFMs. DOE Grant No. DE-SC0001304.

  18. Temperature-driven band inversion in Pb 0.77 Sn 0.23 Se : Optical and Hall effect studies

    DOE PAGES

    Anand, Naween; Buvaev, Sanal; Hebard, A. F.; ...

    2014-12-23

    Optical and Hall-effect measurements have been performed on single crystals of Pb₀.₇₇Sn₀.₂₃Se, a IV-VI mixed chalcogenide. The temperature dependent (10–300 K) reflectance was measured over 40–7000 cm⁻¹ (5–870 meV) with an extension to 15,500 cm⁻¹ (1.92 eV) at room temperature. The reflectance was fit to the Drude-Lorentz model using a single Drude component and several Lorentz oscillators. The optical properties at the measured temperatures were estimated via Kramers-Kronig analysis as well as by the Drude-Lorentz fit. The carriers were p-type with the carrier density determined by Hall measurements. A signature of valence intraband transition is found in the low-energy opticalmore » spectra. It is found that the valence-conduction band transition energy as well as the free carrier effective mass reach minimum values at 100 K, suggesting temperature-driven band inversion in the material. Thus, density function theory calculation for the electronic band structure also make similar predictions.« less

  19. Anomalous Hall effect in ion-beam sputtered Co2FeAl full Heusler alloy thin films

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Husain, Sajid; Kumar, Ankit; Akansel, Serkan; Svedlindh, Peter; Chaudhary, Sujeet

    2017-11-01

    Investigations of temperature dependent anomalous Hall effect and longitudinal resistivity in Co2FeAl (CFA) thin films grown on Si(1 0 0) at different substrate temperature Ts are reported. The scaling of the anomalous Hall conductivity (AHC) and the associated phenomenological mechanisms (intrinsic and extrinsic) are analyzed vis-à-vis influence of Ts. The intrinsic contribution to AHC is found to be dominating over the extrinsic one. The appearance of a resistivity minimum at low temperature necessitates the inclusion of quantum corrections on account of weak localization and electron-electron scattering effects whose strength reduces with increase in Ts. The study establishes that the optimization of Ts plays an important role in the improvement of atomic ordering which indicates the higher strength of spin-orbit coupling and leads to the dominant intrinsic contribution to AHC in these CFA full Heusler alloy thin films.

  20. Anomalous Hall effect scaling in ferromagnetic thin films

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Grigoryan, Vahram L.; Xiao, Jiang; Wang, Xuhui; Xia, Ke

    2017-10-01

    We propose a scaling law for anomalous Hall effect in ferromagnetic thin films. Our approach distinguishes multiple scattering sources, namely, bulk impurity, phonon for Hall resistivity, and most importantly the rough surface contribution to longitudinal resistivity. In stark contrast to earlier laws that rely on temperature- and thickness-dependent fitting coefficients, this scaling law fits the recent experimental data excellently with constant parameters that are independent of temperature and film thickness, strongly indicating that this law captures the underlying physical processes. Based on a few data points, this scaling law can even fit all experimental data in full temperature and thickness range. We apply this law to interpret the experimental data for Fe, Co, and Ni and conclude that (i) the phonon-induced skew scattering is unimportant as expected; (ii) contribution from the impurity-induced skew scattering is negative; (iii) the intrinsic (extrinsic) mechanism dominates in Fe (Co), and both the extrinsic and intrinsic contributions are important in Ni.

  1. Tuning charge transport in pentacene thin-film transistors using the strain-induced electron-phonon coupling modification

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Lin, Yow-Jon; Chang, Hsing-Cheng; Liu, Day-Shan

    2015-03-01

    Tuning charge transport in the bottom-contact pentacene-based organic thin-film transistors (OTFTs) using a MoO x capping layer that serves to the electron-phonon coupling modification is reported. For OTFTs with a MoO x front gate, the enhanced field-effect carrier mobility is investigated. The time domain data confirm the electron-trapping model. To understand the origin of a mobility enhancement, an analysis of the temperature-dependent Hall-effect characteristics is presented. Similarly, the Hall-effect carrier mobility was dramatically increased by capping a MoO x layer on the pentacene front surface. However, the carrier concentration is not affected. The Hall-effect carrier mobility exhibits strong temperature dependence, indicating the dominance of tunneling (hopping) at low (high) temperatures. A mobility enhancement is considered to come from the electron-phonon coupling modification that results from the contribution of long-lifetime electron trapping.

  2. Electrical characterizations of MIS structures based on variable-gap n(p)-HgCdTe grown by MBE on Si(0 1 3) substrates

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Voitsekhovskii, A. V.; Nesmelov, S. N.; Dzyadukh, S. M.; Varavin, V. S.; Dvoretskii, S. A.; Mikhailov, N. N.; Yakushev, M. V.; Sidorov, G. Yu.

    2017-12-01

    Metal-insulator-semiconductor (MIS) structures based on n(p)-Hg1-xCdxTe (x = 0.22-0.40) with near-surface variable-gap layers were grown by the molecular-beam epitaxy (MBE) technique on the Si (0 1 3) substrates. Electrical properties of MIS structures were investigated experimentally at various temperatures (9-77 K) and directions of voltage sweep. The ;narrow swing; technique was used to determine the spectra of fast surface states with the exception of hysteresis effects. It is established that the density of fast surface states at the MCT/Al2O3 interface at a minimum does not exceed 3 × 1010 eV-1 × cm-2. For MIS structures based on n-MCT/Si(0 1 3), the differential resistance of the space-charge region in strong inversion mode in the temperature range 50-90 K is limited by the Shockley-Read-Hall generation in the space-charge region.

  3. Optical Boron Nitride Insulator Erosion Characterization of a 200 W Xenon Hall Thruster

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2005-05-01

    Hall thruster boron nitride insulator is evaluated as a diagnostic for real-time evaluation of thruster insulator erosion. Three Hall thruster plasma control variables are examined: ion energy (discharge potential), ion flux (propellant flow), and plasma conductivity (magnetic field strength). The boron emission, and hence the insulator erosion rate, varies linearly with ion energy and ion flux. A minimum erosion rate appears at intermediate magnetic field strengths. This may indicate that local plasma conductivity significantly affects the divergence

  4. Student Satisfaction and Quality of Life Survey: Residence Halls.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Stoner, Kenneth L.

    The attitudes and level of satisfaction with residence hall life of University of Tennessee students were surveyed in 1981. Responses of the 500 students to 17 satisfaction questions were correlated with six demographic variables. When academic classification was analyzed, it was found that freshmen were significantly less satisfied with the…

  5. Effect of hydrogenation on the electrical and optical properties of CdZnTe substrates and HgCdTe epitaxial layers

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Sitharaman, S.; Raman, R.; Durai, L.; Pal, Surendra; Gautam, Madhukar; Nagpal, Anjana; Kumar, Shiv; Chatterjee, S. N.; Gupta, S. C.

    2005-12-01

    In this paper, we report the experimental observations on the effect of plasma hydrogenation in passivating intrinsic point defects, shallow/deep levels and extended defects in low-resistivity undoped CdZnTe crystals. The optical absorption studies show transmittance improvement in the below gap absorption spectrum. Using variable temperature Hall measurement technique, the shallow defect level on which the penetrating hydrogen makes complex, has been identified. In 'compensated' n-type HgCdTe epitaxial layers, hydrogenation can improve the resistivity by two orders of magnitude.

  6. Turbulence Measurements in a Tropical Zoo Hall

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Eugster, Werner; Denzler, Basil; Bogdal, Christian

    2017-04-01

    The Masoala rainforest hall of the Zurich Zoo, Switzerland, covers a ground surface area of 10,856 m2 and reaches 30 m in height. With its transparent ETFE foiled roof it provides a tropical climate for a large diversity of plants and animals. In combination with an effort to estimate dry deposition of elemental mercury, we made an attempt to measure turbulent transfer velocity with an ultrasonic anemometer inside the hall. Not surprising, the largest turbulence elements were on the order of the hall dimension. Although the dimensions of the hall seem to be small (200,000 m3) for eddy covariance flux measurements and the air circulation inside the hall was extremely weak, the spectra of wind velocity components and virtual (sonic) temperature obeyed the general statistical description expected under unconstrained outdoor measurement conditions. We will present results from a two-week measurement campaign in the Masoala rainforest hall and make a suggestion for the deposition velocity to be used to estimate dry deposition of atmospheric components to the tropical vegetation surface.

  7. Measurements of dynamo electric field and momentum transport induced by fluctuations on HIST

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Hirono, H.; Hanao, T.; Hyobu, T.; Ito, K.; Matsumoto, K.; Nakayama, T.; Kikuchi, Y.; Fukumoto, N.; Nagata, M.

    2012-10-01

    Coaxial Helicity injection (CHI) is an efficient current-drive method used in spheromak and spherical torus (ST) experiments. It is an important issue to investigate dynamo effect to explore CHI current drive mechanisms. To establish the dynamo model with two-fluid Hall effects, we verify the parallel mean-field Ohm's law balance. The spatial profiles of the MHD/Hall dynamo electric fields are measured by using Mach probe and Hall probe involving 3-axis magnetic pick-up coils. The MHD/Hall fluctuation-induced electromotive forces are large enough to sustain the mean toroidal current against the resistive decay. We have measured the electron temperature and the density with great accuracy by using a new electrostatic probe with voltage sweeping. The result shows that the electron temperature is high in the core region and low in the central open flux column (OFC), and the electron density is highest in the OFC region. The Hall dynamo becomes more dominant in a lower density region compared to the MHD dynamo. In addition, the fluctuation-induced Maxwell and Reynolds stresses are calculated to examine the fast radial transport of momentum from the OFC to the core region during the dynamo drive.

  8. Study on the influences of ionization region material arrangement on Hall thruster channel discharge characteristics

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Xiang, HU; Ping, DUAN; Jilei, SONG; Wenqing, LI; Long, CHEN; Xingyu, BIAN

    2018-02-01

    There exists strong interaction between the plasma and channel wall in the Hall thruster, which greatly affects the discharge performance of the thruster. In this paper, a two-dimensional physical model is established based on the actual size of an Aton P70 Hall thruster discharge channel. The particle-in-cell simulation method is applied to study the influences of segmented low emissive graphite electrode biased with anode voltage on the discharge characteristics of the Hall thruster channel. The influences of segmented electrode placed at the ionization region on electric potential, ion number density, electron temperature, ionization rate, discharge current and specific impulse are discussed. The results show that, when segmented electrode is placed at the ionization region, the axial length of the acceleration region is shortened, the equipotential lines tend to be vertical with wall at the acceleration region, thus radial velocity of ions is reduced along with the wall corrosion. The axial position of the maximal electron temperature moves towards the exit with the expansion of ionization region. Furthermore, the electron-wall collision frequency and ionization rate also increase, the discharge current decreases and the specific impulse of the Hall thruster is slightly enhanced.

  9. Effect of IrMn inserted layer on anomalous-Hall resistance and spin-Hall magnetoresistance in Pt/IrMn/YIG heterostructures

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Shang, T.; Yang, H. L.; Zhan, Q. F.; Zuo, Z. H.; Xie, Y. L.; Liu, L. P.; Zhang, S. L.; Zhang, Y.; Li, H. H.; Wang, B. M.; Wu, Y. H.; Zhang, S.; Li, Run-Wei

    2016-10-01

    We report an investigation of anomalous-Hall resistance (AHR) and spin-Hall magnetoresistance (SMR) in Pt/Ir20Mn80/Y3Fe5O12 (Pt/IrMn/YIG) heterostructures. The AHR of Pt/IrMn/YIG heterostructures with an antiferromagnetic inserted layer is dramatically enhanced as compared to that of the Pt/YIG bilayer. The temperature dependent AHR behavior is nontrivial, while the IrMn thickness dependent AHR displays a peak at an IrMn thickness of 3 nm. The observed SMR in the temperature range of 10-300 K indicates that the spin current generated in the Pt layer can penetrate the IrMn layer (≤3 nm) to interact with the ferromagnetic YIG layer. The lack of conventional anisotropic magnetoresistance (AMR) implies that the insertion of the IrMn layer between Pt and YIG could efficiently suppress the magnetic proximity effect (MPE) on induced Pt moments by YIG.

  10. A highly sensitive CMOS digital Hall sensor for low magnetic field applications.

    PubMed

    Xu, Yue; Pan, Hong-Bin; He, Shu-Zhuan; Li, Li

    2012-01-01

    Integrated CMOS Hall sensors have been widely used to measure magnetic fields. However, they are difficult to work with in a low magnetic field environment due to their low sensitivity and large offset. This paper describes a highly sensitive digital Hall sensor fabricated in 0.18 μm high voltage CMOS technology for low field applications. The sensor consists of a switched cross-shaped Hall plate and a novel signal conditioner. It effectively eliminates offset and low frequency 1/f noise by applying a dynamic quadrature offset cancellation technique. The measured results show the optimal Hall plate achieves a high current related sensitivity of about 310 V/AT. The whole sensor has a remarkable ability to measure a minimum ± 2 mT magnetic field and output a digital Hall signal in a wide temperature range from -40 °C to 120 °C.

  11. Prospect of quantum anomalous Hall and quantum spin Hall effect in doped kagome lattice Mott insulators.

    PubMed

    Guterding, Daniel; Jeschke, Harald O; Valentí, Roser

    2016-05-17

    Electronic states with non-trivial topology host a number of novel phenomena with potential for revolutionizing information technology. The quantum anomalous Hall effect provides spin-polarized dissipation-free transport of electrons, while the quantum spin Hall effect in combination with superconductivity has been proposed as the basis for realizing decoherence-free quantum computing. We introduce a new strategy for realizing these effects, namely by hole and electron doping kagome lattice Mott insulators through, for instance, chemical substitution. As an example, we apply this new approach to the natural mineral herbertsmithite. We prove the feasibility of the proposed modifications by performing ab-initio density functional theory calculations and demonstrate the occurrence of the predicted effects using realistic models. Our results herald a new family of quantum anomalous Hall and quantum spin Hall insulators at affordable energy/temperature scales based on kagome lattices of transition metal ions.

  12. Piezo Voltage Controlled Planar Hall Effect Devices

    PubMed Central

    Zhang, Bao; Meng, Kang-Kang; Yang, Mei-Yin; Edmonds, K. W.; Zhang, Hao; Cai, Kai-Ming; Sheng, Yu; Zhang, Nan; Ji, Yang; Zhao, Jian-Hua; Zheng, Hou-Zhi; Wang, Kai-You

    2016-01-01

    The electrical control of the magnetization switching in ferromagnets is highly desired for future spintronic applications. Here we report on hybrid piezoelectric (PZT)/ferromagnetic (Co2FeAl) devices in which the planar Hall voltage in the ferromagnetic layer is tuned solely by piezo voltages. The change of planar Hall voltage is associated with magnetization switching through 90° in the plane under piezo voltages. Room temperature magnetic NOT and NOR gates are demonstrated based on the piezo voltage controlled Co2FeAl planar Hall effect devices without the external magnetic field. Our demonstration may lead to the realization of both information storage and processing using ferromagnetic materials. PMID:27329068

  13. Piezo Voltage Controlled Planar Hall Effect Devices.

    PubMed

    Zhang, Bao; Meng, Kang-Kang; Yang, Mei-Yin; Edmonds, K W; Zhang, Hao; Cai, Kai-Ming; Sheng, Yu; Zhang, Nan; Ji, Yang; Zhao, Jian-Hua; Zheng, Hou-Zhi; Wang, Kai-You

    2016-06-22

    The electrical control of the magnetization switching in ferromagnets is highly desired for future spintronic applications. Here we report on hybrid piezoelectric (PZT)/ferromagnetic (Co2FeAl) devices in which the planar Hall voltage in the ferromagnetic layer is tuned solely by piezo voltages. The change of planar Hall voltage is associated with magnetization switching through 90° in the plane under piezo voltages. Room temperature magnetic NOT and NOR gates are demonstrated based on the piezo voltage controlled Co2FeAl planar Hall effect devices without the external magnetic field. Our demonstration may lead to the realization of both information storage and processing using ferromagnetic materials.

  14. Robust emergence of a topological Hall effect in MnGa/heavy metal bilayers

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Meng, K. K.; Zhao, X. P.; Liu, P. F.; Liu, Q.; Wu, Y.; Li, Z. P.; Chen, J. K.; Miao, J.; Xu, X. G.; Zhao, J. H.; Jiang, Y.

    2018-02-01

    We have investigated the topological Hall effect (THE) in MnGa/Pt and MnGa/Ta bilayers induced by the inter- facial Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI). By varying the growth parameters, we can modulate the domain wall energy, and the largest THE signals are found when the domain wall energy is the smallest. The large topological portion of the Hall signal from the total Hall signal has been extracted in the whole temperature range from 5 to 300 K. These results open up the exploration of the DMI induced magnetic behavior based on the bulk perpendicular magnetic anisotropy materials for fundamental physics and magnetic storage technologies.

  15. Magnetic Reconnection and Modification of the Hall Physics Due to Cold Ions at the Magnetopause

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Andre, M.; Li, W.; Toldeo-Redondo, S.; Khotyaintsev, Yu. V.; Vaivads, A.; Graham, D. B.; Norgren, C.; Burch, J.; Lindqvist, P.-A.; Marklund, G.; hide

    2016-01-01

    Observations by the four Magnetospheric Multiscale spacecraft are used to investigate the Hall physics of a magnetopause magnetic reconnection separatrix layer. Inside this layer of currents and strong normal electric fields, cold (eV) ions of ionospheric origin can remain frozen-in together with the electrons. The cold ions reduce the Hall current. Using a generalized Ohms law, the electric field is balanced by the sum of the terms corresponding to the Hall current, the v x B drifting cold ions, and the divergence of the electron pressure tensor. A mixture of hot and cold ions is common at the subsolar magnetopause. A mixture of length scales caused by a mixture of ion temperatures has significant effects on the Hall physics of magnetic reconnection.

  16. Anomalous Hall Effect in a Feromagnetic Rare-Earth Cobalite

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Samoilov, A. V.; Yeh, N. C.; Vasquez, R. P.

    1996-01-01

    Rare-Earth manganites and cobalites with the perovskite structure have been a subject of great recent interest because their electrical resistance changes significantly when a magnetic field is applied...we have studied the Hall effect in thin film La(sub 0.5)Ca(sub 0.5)CoO(sub 3) material and have obtained convincing evidence fo the so called anomalous Hall effect, typical for magnetic metals...Our results suggest that near the ferromagnetic ordering temperature, the dominant electron scattering mechanism is the spin fluctuation.

  17. Evidence of Collisionless Shocks in a Hall Thruster Plume

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2003-04-25

    Triple Langmuir probes and emissive probes are used to measure the electron number density, electron temperature, and plasma potential downstream of a low-power Hall thruster . The results show a high density plasma core with elevated electron temperature and plasma potential along the thruster centerline. These properties are believed to be due to collisionless shocks formed as a result of the ion/ion acoustic instability. A simple model is presented that shows the existence of a collisionless shock to be consistent with the observed phenomena.

  18. High-resolution scanning Hall probe microscopy

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Hallen, Hans D.; Hess, H. F.; Chang, A. M.; Pfeiffer, Loren N.; West, Kenneth W.; Mitzi, David B.

    1993-06-01

    A high resolution scanning Hall probe microscope is used to spatially resolve vortices in high temperature superconducting Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+(delta) crystals. We observe a partially ordered vortex lattice at several different applied magnetic fields and temperatures. At higher temperatures, a limited amount of vortex re-arrangement is observed, but most vortices remain fixed for periods long compared to the imaging time of several hours even at temperatures as high as 75 degree(s)K (the superconducting transition temperature for these crystals is approximately 84 degree(s)K). A measure of these local magnetic penetration depth can be obtained from a fit to the surface field of several neighboring vortices, and has been measured as a function of temperature. In particular, we have measured the zero temperature penetration depth and found it to be 275 +/- 40 nm.

  19. Towards Thermal Reading of Magnetic States in Hall Crosses

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Xu, Y.; Petit-Watelot, S.; Polewczyk, V.; Parent, G.; Montaigne, F.; Wegrowe, J.-E.; Mangin, S.; Lacroix, D.; Hehn, M.; Lacour, D.

    2018-03-01

    The 3 ω method is a standard way to measure the thermal conductivity of thin films. In this study, we apply the method to read the magnetic state of a perpendicularly magnetized CoTb ferrimagnetic Hall cross using a thermal excitation. In order to generate the thermal excitation, an oscillating current at an ω frequency is applied to the Hall cross using different geometries. The magnetic signals oscillating at ω , 2 ω , and 3 ω are probed using a lock-in technique. From the analysis of the power dependence, we can attribute the 3 ω response to the temperature oscillation and the 2 ω to the temperature-gradient oscillation. Finally, the frequency dependence of the magnetic signals can be understood by considering the heat diffusion in a two-dimensional model.

  20. Magnetically-related properties of bismuth containing high Tc superconductors

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Vezzoli, Gary C.; Chen, M. F.; Craver, F.; Safari, A.; Moon, B. M.; Lalevic, B.; Burke, Terence; Shoga, M.

    1990-08-01

    The effect of magnetic fields to 15 T on electrical resistance has been measured for the BiSrCaCuO superconductor at precise temperatures during the transition to the superconducting state from pre-onset conditions to essentially zero resistance conditions. The results show that the temperature at which the magnetic field causes a divergence in the resistance versus 1000/ T curve is approximately the same temperature as the value at which, during cooling, the positive Hall coefficient begins its abrupt descent to zero. This temperature gives the best measure of Tc. It is also shown that small oscillations of low frequency start near onset conditions, the amplitude of which at a given temperature is B-field dependent. Additionally, Hall effect studies as a function of temperature at 4 T in three separate experiments (including high Tc BiSrCaCu PbO of > 90% theoretical density) show that sharp delta-function-like peaks in + RH are observed near Tc and are superimposed on a broader maximum. The Hall data are explicable in terms of exciton formation and ionization. The bound holes associated with these excitons are believed to be the mediators producing Cooper-pairing, and scale very well with Tc for all the known high Tc oxides.

  1. Defect control of conventional and anomalous electron transport at complex oxide interfaces

    DOE PAGES

    Gunkel, F.; Bell, Chris; Inoue, Hisashi; ...

    2016-08-30

    Using low-temperature electrical measurements, the interrelation between electron transport, magnetic properties, and ionic defect structure in complex oxide interface systems is investigated, focusing on NdGaO 3/SrTiO 3 (100) interfaces. Field-dependent Hall characteristics (2–300 K) are obtained for samples grown at various growth pressures. In addition to multiple electron transport, interfacial magnetism is tracked exploiting the anomalous Hall effect (AHE). These two properties both contribute to a nonlinearity in the field dependence of the Hall resistance, with multiple carrier conduction evident below 30 K and AHE at temperatures ≲10 K. Considering these two sources of nonlinearity, we suggest a phenomenological modelmore » capturing the complex field dependence of the Hall characteristics in the low-temperature regime. Our model allows the extraction of the conventional transport parameters and a qualitative analysis of the magnetization. The electron mobility is found to decrease systematically with increasing growth pressure. This suggests dominant electron scattering by acceptor-type strontium vacancies incorporated during growth. The AHE scales with growth pressure. In conclusion, the most pronounced AHE is found at increased growth pressure and, thus, in the most defective, low-mobility samples, indicating a correlation between transport, magnetism, and cation defect concentration.« less

  2. Negative spin Hall magnetoresistance in antiferromagnetic Cr2O3/Ta bilayer at low temperature region

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ji, Yang; Miao, J.; Zhu, Y. M.; Meng, K. K.; Xu, X. G.; Chen, J. K.; Wu, Y.; Jiang, Y.

    2018-06-01

    We demonstrate the negative spin Hall magnetoresistance (SMR) observed in antiferromagnetic Cr2O3/Ta bilayers at low temperature. The SMR signals are changed from the positive to negative magnitude when monotonously reducing the temperature from 300 K to 50 K. The positive and negative SMR signals are expected to be associated with the two different ways for injection of the spin current, into the boundary ferromagnetic region and the bulk antiferromagnetic region of α-Cr2O3 (0001), respectively. The slopes of the abnormal Hall curves exhibit the same sign with the SMR signal. From the SMR ratio under 3 T, the spin mixing conductance at the Cr2O3/Ta interface is estimated to be 1.12 × 1014 Ω-1.m-2, which is comparable to the one observed in the Y3Fe5O12(YIG)/Pt structure and our early results of the Cr2O3/W structure.

  3. Full wafer size investigation of N+ and P+ co-implanted layers in 4H-SiC

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Blanqué, S.; Lyonnet, J.; Pérez, R.; Terziyska, P.; Contreras, S.; Godignon, P.; Mestres, N.; Pascual, J.; Camassel, J.

    2005-03-01

    We report a full wafer size investigation of the homogeneity of electrical properties in the case of co-implanted nitrogen and phosphorus ions in 4H-SiC semi-insulating wafers. To match standard industrial requirements, implantation was done at room temperature. To achieve a detailed electrical knowledge, we worked on a 35 mm wafer on which 77 different reticules have been processed. Every reticule includes one Hall cross, one Van der Pauw test structure and different TLM patterns. Hall measurements have been made on all 77 different reticules, using an Accent HL5500 Hall System® from BioRad fitted with an home-made support to collect data from room temperature down to about 150 K. At room temperature, we find that the sheet carrier concentration is only 1/4 of the total implanted dose while the average mobility is 80.6 cm2/Vs. The standard deviation is, typically, 1.5 cm2/Vs.

  4. Evidence of in-plane ferromagnetic order probed by planar Hall effect in the geometry-confined ruthenate S r4R u3O10

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Liu, Yan; Yang, Jiyong; Wang, Weike; Du, Haifeng; Ning, Wei; Ling, Langsheng; Tong, Wei; Qu, Zhe; Cao, Gang; Zhang, Yuheng; Tian, Mingliang

    2017-04-01

    The magnetic structure in the strongly correlated ruthenate S r4R u3O10 has been debated for a long time and still remains elusive. Here, we perform a systematically planar Hall effect study on a single-crystalline S r4R u3O10 nanostripe with a thickness of less than 100 nm. Large sharp switching behavior is observed in the planar Hall resistance, unambiguously indicating a strong anisotropic in-plane ferromagnetic order in the nanostripe, which is in contrast to the bulk system. Temperature-dependent evolution of the in-plane magnetism reveals that the in-plane spin order transforms from a single-domain state below a Curie temperature TC into a multidomain state below a critical temperature TM, probably due to the inherent strong spin-orbit coupling driven reconfiguration of spins between the c axis and the a b plane.

  5. Beyond Hall: Variables in the Use of Personal Space in Intercultural Transactions.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Dolphin, Carol Zinner

    Edward Hall's long accepted theories of proxemics, developed in the mid-sixties of this century, promoted the idea that culture plays the definitive role in determining how different individuals use personal space. Contact cultures, inhabited by people who are comfortable with touching and close contact, include those of Arabia, Latin America, and…

  6. Influence of Mn concentration on magnetic topological insulator Mn xBi 2−xTe 3 thin-film Hall-effect sensor

    DOE PAGES

    Ni, Y.; Zhang, Z.; Nlebedim, I. C.; ...

    2015-06-11

    Hall-effect (HE) sensors based on high-quality Mn-doped Bi 2Te 3 topological insulator (TI) thin films have been systematically studied in this paper. Improvement of Hall sensitivity is found after doping the magnetic element Mn into Bi 2Te 3. The sensors with low Mn concentrations, Mn xBi 2-xTe 3, x = 0.01 and 0.08 show the linear behavior of Hall resistance with sensitivity about 5 Ω/T. And their Hall sensitivity shows weak dependence on temperature. For sensors with high Mn concentration (x = 0.23), the Hall resistance with respect to magnetic field shows a hysteretic behavior. Moreover, its sensitivity shows almostmore » eight times as high as that of the HE sensors with low Mn concentration. The highest sensitivity can reach 43 Ω/T at very low magnetic field. This increase of Hall sensitivity is caused by the occurrence of anomalous HE (AHE) after ferromagnetic phase transition. Our work indicates that the magnetic-element-doped TIs with AHE are good candidates for HE sensors.« less

  7. Magnetometry of micro-magnets with electrostatically defined Hall bars

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Lachance-Quirion, Dany; Camirand Lemyre, Julien; Bergeron, Laurent

    2015-11-30

    Micro-magnets are key components for quantum information processing with individual spins, enabling arbitrary rotations and addressability. In this work, characterization of sub-micrometer sized CoFe ferromagnets is performed with Hall bars electrostatically defined in a two-dimensional electron gas. Due to the ballistic nature of electron transport in the cross junction of the Hall bar, anomalies such as the quenched Hall effect appear near zero external magnetic field, thus hindering the sensitivity of the magnetometer to small magnetic fields. However, it is shown that the sensitivity of the diffusive limit can be almost completely restored at low temperatures using a large currentmore » density in the Hall bar of about 10 A/m. Overcoming the size limitation of conventional etched Hall bars with electrostatic gating enables the measurement of magnetization curves of 440 nm wide micro-magnets with a signal-to-noise ratio above 10{sup 3}. Furthermore, the inhomogeneity of the stray magnetic field created by the micro-magnets is directly measured using the gate-voltage-dependent width of the sensitive area of the Hall bar.« less

  8. Large discrete jumps observed in the transition between Chern states in a ferromagnetic topological insulator

    PubMed Central

    Liu, Minhao; Wang, Wudi; Richardella, Anthony R.; Kandala, Abhinav; Li, Jian; Yazdani, Ali; Samarth, Nitin; Ong, N. Phuan

    2016-01-01

    A striking prediction in topological insulators is the appearance of the quantized Hall resistance when the surface states are magnetized. The surface Dirac states become gapped everywhere on the surface, but chiral edge states remain on the edges. In an applied current, the edge states produce a quantized Hall resistance that equals the Chern number C = ±1 (in natural units), even in zero magnetic field. This quantum anomalous Hall effect was observed by Chang et al. With reversal of the magnetic field, the system is trapped in a metastable state because of magnetic anisotropy. We investigate how the system escapes the metastable state at low temperatures (10 to 200 mK). When the dissipation (measured by the longitudinal resistance) is ultralow, we find that the system escapes by making a few very rapid transitions, as detected by large jumps in the Hall and longitudinal resistances. Using the field at which the initial jump occurs to estimate the escape rate, we find that raising the temperature strongly suppresses the rate. From a detailed map of the resistance versus gate voltage and temperature, we show that dissipation strongly affects the escape rate. We compare the observations with dissipative quantum tunneling predictions. In the ultralow dissipation regime, two temperature scales (T1 ~ 70 mK and T2 ~ 145 mK) exist, between which jumps can be observed. The jumps display a spatial correlation that extends over a large fraction of the sample. PMID:27482539

  9. Low temperature sputter-deposited ZnO films with enhanced Hall mobility using excimer laser post-processing

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Tsakonas, C.; Kuznetsov, V. L.; Cranton, W. M.; Kalfagiannis, N.; Abusabee, K. M.; Koutsogeorgis, D. C.; Abeywickrama, N.; Edwards, P. P.

    2017-12-01

    We report the low temperature (T  <  70 °C) fabrication of ZnO thin films (~140 nm) with Hall mobility of up to 17.3 cm2 V-1 s-1 making them suitable for thin film transistor (TFT) applications. The films were deposited by rf magnetron sputtering at T  <  70 °C and subsequently laser processed in ambient temperature in order to modify the Hall mobility and carrier concentration. Medium-to-low energy laser radiation densities and a high number of pulses were used to avoid damaging the films. Laser annealing of the films after aging in the lab under 25%-35% relative humidity and at an average illuminance of 120 lux resulted in an overall higher mobility and relatively low carrier concentration in comparison to the non-aged films that were laser processed immediately after deposition. A maximum overall measured Hall mobility of 17.3 cm2 V-1 s-1 at a carrier density of 2.3  ×  1018 cm-3 was measured from a 1 GΩ as deposited and aged film after the laser treatment. We suggest that the aging of non-processed films reduces structural defects mainly at grain boundaries by air species chemisorption, with concomitant increase in thermal conductivity so that laser processing can have an enhancing effect. Such a processing combination can act synergistically and produce suitable active layers for TFT applications with low temperature processing requirements.

  10. Dependence of defect introduction on temperature and resistivity and some long-term annealing effects

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Brucker, G. J.

    1971-01-01

    The effort reported here represents data of lithium properties in bulk-silicon samples before and after irradiation for analytical information required to characterize the interactions of lithium with radiation-induced defects in silicon. A model of the damage and recovery mechanisms in irradiated-lithium-containing solar cells is developed based on making measurements of the Hall coefficient and resistivity of samples irradiated by 1-MeV electrons. Experiments on bulk samples included Hall coefficient and resistivity measurements taken as a function of: (1) bombardment temperature, (2) resistivity, (3) fluence, (4) oxygen concentration, and (5) annealing time at temperatures from 300 to 373 K.

  11. Topological aspect and the pairing symmetries on spin-triplet chiral p-wave superconductor under strain

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Imai, Yoshiki; Sigrist, Manfred

    2018-05-01

    Motivated by recent experiments on Sr2RuO4, the effect of uniaxial strain on the chiral p-wave superconductor is discussed. We study particularly the relation between the topological indices and different pairing states in the superconducting phase through the thermal Hall conductivity, which is proportional to temperature and the Chern number in the very low-temperature limit. We show that the temperature-dependence of the thermal Hall conductivity under uniaxial strain depends strongly on the form of the pairing state. The obtained result may provide a possible experimental probe for the pairing structure in Sr2RuO4.

  12. Scanning hall probe microscopy (SHPM) using quartz crystal AFM feedback.

    PubMed

    Dede, M; Urkmen, K; Girişen, O; Atabak, M; Oral, A; Farrer, I; Ritchie, D

    2008-02-01

    Scanning Hall Probe Microscopy (SHPM) is a quantitative and non-invasive technique for imaging localized surface magnetic field fluctuations such as ferromagnetic domains with high spatial and magnetic field resolution of approximately 50 nm and 7 mG/Hz(1/2) at room temperature. In the SHPM technique, scanning tunneling microscope (STM) or atomic force microscope (AFM) feedback is used to keep the Hall sensor in close proximity of the sample surface. However, STM tracking SHPM requires conductive samples; therefore the insulating substrates have to be coated with a thin layer of gold. This constraint can be eliminated with the AFM feedback using sophisticated Hall probes that are integrated with AFM cantilevers. However it is very difficult to micro fabricate these sensors. In this work, we have eliminated the difficulty in the cantilever-Hall probe integration process, just by gluing a Hall Probe chip to a quartz crystal tuning fork force sensor. The Hall sensor chip is simply glued at the end of a 32.768 kHz or 100 kHz Quartz crystal, which is used as force sensor. An LT-SHPM system is used to scan the samples. The sensor assembly is dithered at the resonance frequency using a digital Phase Locked Loop circuit and frequency shifts are used for AFM tracking. SHPM electronics is modified to detect AFM topography and the frequency shift, along with the magnetic field image. Magnetic domains and topography of an Iron Garnet thin film crystal, NdFeB demagnetised magnet and hard disk samples are presented at room temperature. The performance is found to be comparable with the SHPM using STM feedback.

  13. Approaching quantum anomalous Hall effect in proximity-coupled YIG/graphene/h-BN sandwich structure

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Tang, Chi; Cheng, Bin; Aldosary, Mohammed; Wang, Zhiyong; Jiang, Zilong; Watanabe, K.; Taniguchi, T.; Bockrath, Marc; Shi, Jing

    2018-02-01

    Quantum anomalous Hall state is expected to emerge in Dirac electron systems such as graphene under both sufficiently strong exchange and spin-orbit interactions. In pristine graphene, neither interaction exists; however, both interactions can be acquired by coupling graphene to a magnetic insulator as revealed by the anomalous Hall effect. Here, we show enhanced magnetic proximity coupling by sandwiching graphene between a ferrimagnetic insulator yttrium iron garnet (YIG) and hexagonal-boron nitride (h-BN) which also serves as a top gate dielectric. By sweeping the top-gate voltage, we observe Fermi level-dependent anomalous Hall conductance. As the Dirac point is approached from both electron and hole sides, the anomalous Hall conductance reaches ¼ of the quantum anomalous Hall conductance 2e2/h. The exchange coupling strength is determined to be as high as 27 meV from the transition temperature of the induced magnetic phase. YIG/graphene/h-BN is an excellent heterostructure for demonstrating proximity-induced interactions in two-dimensional electron systems.

  14. Low-temperature magnetotransport of the narrow-gap semiconductor FeSb2

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Takahashi, H.; Okazaki, R.; Yasui, Y.; Terasaki, I.

    2011-11-01

    We present a study of the magnetoresistance and Hall effect in the narrow-gap semiconductor FeSb2 at low temperatures. Both the electrical and Hall resistivities show unusual magnetic field dependence in the low-temperature range where a large Seebeck coefficient was observed. By applying a two-carrier model, we find that the carrier concentration decreases from 1 down to 10-4 ppm/unit cell and the mobility increases from 2000 to 28 000 cm2/Vs with decreasing temperature from 30 down to 4 K. At lower temperatures, the magnetoresistive behavior drastically changes and a negative magnetoresistance is observed at 3 K. These low-temperature behaviors are reminiscent of the low-temperature magnetotransport observed in doped semiconductors such as As-doped Ge, which is well described by a weak-localization picture. We argue a detailed electronic structure in FeSb2 inferred from our observations.

  15. Hall effects on unsteady MHD flow of second grade fluid through porous medium with ramped wall temperature and ramped surface concentration

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    VeeraKrishna, M.; Chamkha, Ali J.

    2018-05-01

    The heat generation/absorption and thermo-diffusion on an unsteady free convective MHD flow of radiating and chemically reactive second grade fluid near an infinite vertical plate through a porous medium and taking the Hall current into account have been studied. Assume that the bounding plate has a ramped temperature with a ramped surface concentration and isothermal temperature with a ramped surface concentration. The analytical solutions for the governing equations are obtained by making use of the Laplace transforms technique. The velocity, temperature, and concentration profiles are discussed through graphs. We also found that velocity, temperature, and concentration profiles in the case of ramped temperature with ramped surface concentrations are less than those of isothermal temperature with ramped surface concentrations. Also, the expressions of the skin friction, Nusselt number, and Sherwood number are obtained and represented computationally through a tabular form.

  16. Micro-Hall magnetometry on a Co-organic chain compound

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Rolland, L.; Simonet, V.; Wernsdorfer, W.; Bogani, L.; Sessoli, R.

    2004-05-01

    The static and dynamical properties of Co-organic chains, with strong magnetic anisotropy, are studied by micro-Hall magnetometry. The low-temperature hysteresis cycles are discussed with respect to the helical structure of the chains. Thermally activated relaxation of the magnetization is observed, compatible with the Glauber model for a 1D Ising system.

  17. Interpretation of transport measurements in ZnO-thin films

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Petukhov, Vladimir; Stoemenos, John; Rothman, Johan; Bakin, Andrey; Waag, Andreas

    2011-01-01

    In order to interpret results of temperature dependent Hall measurements in heteroepitaxial ZnO-thin films, we adopted a multilayer conductivity model considering carrier-transport through the interfacial layer with degenerate electron gas as well as the upper part of ZnO layers with lower conductivity. This model was applied to the temperature dependence of the carrier concentration and mobility measured by Hall effect in a ZnO-layer grown on c-sapphire with conventional high-temperature MgO and low-temperature ZnO buffer. We also compared our results with the results of maximum entropy mobility-spectrum analysis (MEMSA). The formation of the highly conductive interfacial layer was explained by analysis of transmission electron microscopy (TEM) images taken from similar layers.

  18. Elastic gauge fields and Hall viscosity of Dirac magnons

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ferreiros, Yago; Vozmediano, María A. H.

    2018-02-01

    We analyze the coupling of elastic lattice deformations to the magnon degrees of freedom of magnon Dirac materials. For a honeycomb ferromagnet we find that, as happens in the case of graphene, elastic gauge fields appear coupled to the magnon pseudospinors. For deformations that induce constant pseudomagnetic fields, the spectrum around the Dirac nodes splits into pseudo-Landau levels. We show that when a Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction is considered, a topological gap opens in the system and a Chern-Simons effective action for the elastic degrees of freedom is generated. Such a term encodes a phonon Hall viscosity response, entirely generated by quantum fluctuations of magnons living in the vicinity of the Dirac points. The magnon Hall viscosity vanishes at zero temperature, and grows as temperature is raised and the states around the Dirac points are increasingly populated.

  19. Unsteady Heat and Mass Transfer of Chemically Reacting Micropolar Fluid in a Porous Channel with Hall and Ion Slip Currents

    PubMed Central

    2014-01-01

    This paper presents an incompressible two-dimensional heat and mass transfer of an electrically conducting micropolar fluid flow in a porous medium between two parallel plates with chemical reaction, Hall and ion slip effects. Let there be periodic injection or suction at the lower and upper plates and the nonuniform temperature and concentration at the plates are varying periodically with time. The flow field equations are reduced to nonlinear ordinary differential equations using similarity transformations and then solved numerically by quasilinearization technique. The profiles of velocity components, microrotation, temperature distribution and concentration are studied for different values of fluid and geometric parameters such as Hartmann number, Hall and ion slip parameters, inverse Darcy parameter, Prandtl number, Schmidt number, and chemical reaction rate and shown in the form of graphs. PMID:27419211

  20. MAGNETAR OUTBURSTS FROM AVALANCHES OF HALL WAVES AND CRUSTAL FAILURES

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Li, Xinyu; Levin, Yuri; Beloborodov, Andrei M.

    2016-12-20

    We explore the interaction between Hall waves and mechanical failures inside a magnetar crust, using detailed one-dimensional models that consider temperature-sensitive plastic flow, heat transport, and cooling by neutrino emission, as well as the coupling of the crustal motion to the magnetosphere. We find that the dynamics is enriched and accelerated by the fast, short-wavelength Hall waves that are emitted by each failure. The waves propagate and cause failures elsewhere, triggering avalanches. We argue that these avalanches are the likely sources of outbursts in transient magnetars.

  1. Note: Fiber optic transport probe for Hall measurements under light and magnetic field at low temperatures: Case study of a two dimensional electron gas

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Bhadauria, P. P. S.; Gupta, Anurag; Kumar, Pramod

    2015-05-15

    A fiber optic based probe is designed and developed for electrical transport measurements in presence of quasi-monochromatic (360–800 nm) light, varying temperature (T = 1.8–300 K), and magnetic field (B = 0–7 T). The probe is tested for the resistivity and Hall measurements performed on a LaAlO{sub 3}–SrTiO{sub 3} heterointerface system with a conducting two dimensional electron gas.

  2. A variable passive low-frequency absorber

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Larsen, Niels Werner; Thompson, Eric R.; Gade, Anders Christian

    2005-04-01

    Multi-purpose concert halls face a dilemma. They can host classical music concerts, rock concerts and spoken word performances in a matter of a short period. These different performance types require significantly different acoustic conditions in order to provide the best sound quality to both the performers and the audience. A recommended reverberation time for classical music may be in the range of 1.5-2 s for empty halls, where rock music sounds best with a reverberation time around 0.8-1 s. Modern rhythmic music often contains high levels of sound energy in the low frequency bands but still requires a high definition for good sound quality. Ideally, the absorption of the hall should be adjustable in all frequency bands in order to provide good sound quality for all types of performances. The mid and high frequency absorption is easily regulated, but adjusting the low-frequency absorption has typically been too expensive or requires too much space to be practical for multi-purpose halls. Measurements were made on a variable low-frequency absorber to develop a practical solution to the dilemma. The paper will present the results of the measurements as well as a possible design.

  3. Magnetotransport properties of microstructured AlCu2Mn Heusler alloy thin films in the amorphous and crystalline phase

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Barzola-Quiquia, José; Stiller, Markus; Esquinazi, Pablo D.; Quispe-Marcatoma, Justiniano; Häussler, Peter

    2018-06-01

    We have studied the resistance, magnetoresistance and Hall effect of AlCu2Mn Heusler alloy thin films prepared by flash evaporation on substrates cooled at 4He liquid temperature. The as-prepared samples were amorphous and were annealed stepwise to induce the transformation to the crystalline phase. The amorphous phase is metastable up to above room temperature and the transition to the crystalline phase was observed by means of resistance measurements. Using transmission electron microscopy, we have determined the structure factor S (K) and the pair correlation function g (r) , both results indicate that amorphous AlCu2Mn is an electronic stabilized phase. The X-ray diffraction of the crystallized film shows peaks corresponding to the well ordered L21 phase. The resistance shows a negative temperature coefficient in both phases. The magnetoresistance (MR) is negative in both phases, yet larger in the crystalline state compared to the amorphous one. The magnetic properties were studied further by anomalous Hall effect measurements, which were present in both phases. In the amorphous state, the anomalous Hall effect disappears at temperatures below 175 K and is present up to above room temperature in the case of crystalline AlCu2Mn.

  4. Role of chiral quantum Hall edge states in nuclear spin polarization.

    PubMed

    Yang, Kaifeng; Nagase, Katsumi; Hirayama, Yoshiro; Mishima, Tetsuya D; Santos, Michael B; Liu, Hongwu

    2017-04-20

    Resistively detected NMR (RDNMR) based on dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) in a quantum Hall ferromagnet (QHF) is a highly sensitive method for the discovery of fascinating quantum Hall phases; however, the mechanism of this DNP and, in particular, the role of quantum Hall edge states in it are unclear. Here we demonstrate the important but previously unrecognized effect of chiral edge modes on the nuclear spin polarization. A side-by-side comparison of the RDNMR signals from Hall bar and Corbino disk configurations allows us to distinguish the contributions of bulk and edge states to DNP in QHF. The unidirectional current flow along chiral edge states makes the polarization robust to thermal fluctuations at high temperatures and makes it possible to observe a reciprocity principle of the RDNMR response. These findings help us better understand complex NMR responses in QHF, which has important implications for the development of RDNMR techniques.

  5. Instabilities and transport in Hall plasmas with ExB drift

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Smolyakov, Andrei

    2016-10-01

    Low temperature plasma with moderate magnetic field, where the ions are not or just weakly magnetized, i.e. the ion Larmor radius being larger or comparable to the characteristic length scale of interest (e.g. the size ofthe system), have distinctly different properties from strongly magnetized plasmas such as that for fusion applications. Such parameters regimes are generally defined here as Hall plasmas. The natural scale separation between the ion and electron Larmor radii in Hall plasma, further exploited by the application of the external electric field, offers unique applications in various plasma devices for material processing and electric propulsion. Plasmas in such devices are in strongly non-equilibrium state making it prone to a number of instabilities. This talk presents physics description of the dominant unstable modes in ExB Hall plasmas resulting in highly turbulent state with nonlinear coherent structures and anomalous electron current. Since ions are un-magnetized, fundamental instabilities operating in low temperature Hall plasmas are very different from much studied gradients (density, temperature and magnetic field) driven drift-wave turbulence in strongly magnetized plasmas for fusion applications. As a result the nonlinear saturation mechanisms, role of the ExB shear flows are also markedly different in such plasmas. We review the basic instabilities in these plasmas which are related to the ion-sound, low-hybrid and anti-drift modes, discuss nonlinear saturation and anomalous transport mechanisms. The advanced nonlinear fluid model for such plasmas and results of nonlinear simulations of turbulence and anomalous transport performed within a modified BOUT++ framework will be presented. Research supported by NSERC Canada and US AFOSR FA9550-15-1-0226.

  6. Magnetometory of AlGaN/GaN heterostructure wafers

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Tsubaki, K.; Maeda, N.; Saitoh, T.; Kobayashi, N.

    2005-06-01

    AlGaN/GaN heterostructure wafers are becoming a key technology for next generation cellar-phone telecommunication system because of their potential for high-performance microwave applications. Therefore, the electronic properties of a 2DEG in AlGaN/GaN heterostructures have recently been discussed. In this paper, we performed the extraordinary Hall effect measurement and the SQUID magnetometory of AlGaN/GaN heterostructure wafer at low temperature. The AlGaN/GaN heterostructures were grown by low-pressure metal-organic chemical vapour phase epitaxy on (0001) SiC substrate using AlN buffers. The electron mobility and electron concentration at 4.2 K are 9,540cm2/V s and 6.6 × 1012cm-2, respectively. In the extraordinary Hall effect measurement of AlGaN/GaN heterostructures, the hysteresis of Hall resistance appeared below 4.5 K and disappeared above 4.5 K. On the other hand, the hysteresis of magnetometric data obtained by SQUID magnetometory appears near zero magnetic field when the temperature is lower than 4.5 K. At the temperature larger than 4.5 K, the hysteresis of magnetometric data disappears. And the slopes of magnetometric data with respect to magnetic field become lower as obeying Currie-Weiss law and the Curie temperature TC is 4.5 K. Agreement of TC measured by the extraordinary Hall effect and the SQUID magnetometory implies the ferromagnetism at the AlGaN/GaN heterojunction. However, the conformation of the ferromagnetism of AlGaN/GaN heterostructure is still difficult and the detailed physical mechanism is still unclear.

  7. Effective anomalous Hall coefficient in an ultrathin Co layer sandwiched by Pt layers

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Zhang, Peng; Wu, Di; Jiang, Zhengsheng

    2014-02-14

    Anomalous Hall effect in Co/Pt multilayer is important to study the effect of interface with strong spin-orbit coupling. However, the shunting effect of the layers in such system and the circuit in the plane perpendicular to the injected current were overlooked in most works and thus, anomalous Hall coefficient in Co/Pt multilayer has not been determined accurately. Considering the shunting effect and the equivalent circuit, we show that the effective anomalous Hall coefficient of a 0.5 nm thick Co layer sandwiched by Pt layers R{sub S} is 0.29 ± 0.01 μΩ cm/T at the zero temperature limit and increases to about 0.73 μΩ cm/T at the temperaturemore » of 300 K. R{sub S} is one order larger than that in bulk Co film, indicating the large contribution of the Co/Pt interface. R{sub S} increases with the resistivity of Co as well as a resistivity independent contribution of −0.23 ± 0.01 μΩ cm/T. The equivalent anomalous Hall current in the Co layer has a maximum of 1.1% of the injected transverse current in the Co layer around the temperature of 80 K.« less

  8. Hall effect within the colossal magnetoresistive semimetallic state of MoTe2

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Zhou, Qiong; Rhodes, D.; Zhang, Q. R.; Tang, S.; Schönemann, R.; Balicas, L.

    2016-09-01

    Here, we report a systematic study on the Hall effect of the semimetallic state of bulk MoTe2, which was recently claimed to be a candidate for a novel type of Weyl semimetallic state. The temperature (T ) dependence of the carrier densities and of their mobilities, as estimated from a numerical analysis based on the isotropic two-carrier model, indicates that its exceedingly large and nonsaturating magnetoresistance may be attributed to a near perfect compensation between the densities of electrons and holes at low temperatures. A sudden increase in hole density, with a concomitant rapid increase in the electron mobility below T ˜40 K, leads to comparable densities of electrons and holes at low temperatures suggesting a possible electronic phase transition around this temperature.

  9. Room temperature magnetism and metal to semiconducting transition in dilute Fe doped Sb1-xSex semiconducting alloy thin films

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Agrawal, Naveen; Sarkar, Mitesh; Chawda, Mukesh; Ganesan, V.; Bodas, Dhananjay

    2015-02-01

    The magnetism was observed in very dilute Fe doped alloy thin film Fe0.008Sb1-xSex, for x = 0.01 to 0.10. These thin films were grown on silicon substrate using thermal evaporation technique. Structural, electrical, optical, charge carrier concentration measurement, surface morphology and magnetic properties were observed using glancing incidence x-ray diffraction (GIXRD), four probe resistivity, photoluminescence, Hall measurement, atomic force microscopy (AFM) and magnetic force microscopy (MFM) techniques, respectively. No peaks of iron were seen in GIXRD. The resistivity results show that activation energy increases with increase in selenium (Se) concentration. The Arrhenius plot reveals metallic behavior below room temperature. The low temperature conduction is explained by variable range-hopping mechanism, which fits very well in the temperature range 150-300 K. The decrease in density of states has been observed with increasing selenium concentration (x = 0.01 to 0.10). There is a metal-to-semiconductor phase transition observed above room temperature. This transition temperature is Se concentration dependent. The particle size distribution ˜47-61 nm is evaluated using AFM images. These thin films exhibit ferromagnetic interactions at room temperature.

  10. Pure spin-Hall magnetoresistance in Rh/Y3Fe5O12 hybrid

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Shang, T.; Zhan, Q. F.; Ma, L.; Yang, H. L.; Zuo, Z. H.; Xie, Y. L.; Li, H. H.; Liu, L. P.; Wang, B. M.; Wu, Y. H.; Zhang, S.; Li, Run-Wei

    2015-12-01

    We report an investigation of anisotropic magnetoresistance (AMR) and anomalous Hall resistance (AHR) of Rh and Pt thin films sputtered on epitaxial Y3Fe5O12 (YIG) ferromagnetic insulator films. For the Pt/YIG hybrid, large spin-Hall magne toresistance (SMR) along with a sizable conventional anisotropic magnetoresistance (CAMR) and a nontrivial temperature dependence of AHR were observed in the temperature range of 5-300 K. In contrast, a reduced SMR with negligible CAMR and AHR was found in Rh/YIG hybrid. Since CAMR and AHR are characteristics for all ferromagnetic metals, our results suggest that the Pt is likely magnetized by YIG due to the magnetic proximity effect (MPE) while Rh remains free of MPE. Thus the Rh/YIG hybrid could be an ideal model system to explore physics and devices associated with pure spin current.

  11. Stratification of welding fumes and grinding particles in a large factory hall equipped with displacement ventilation.

    PubMed

    Niemelä, R; Koskela, H; Engström, K

    2001-08-01

    The purpose of the study was to investigate the performance of displacement ventilation in a large factory hall where large components of stainless steel for paper, pulp and chemical industries were manufactured. The performance of displacement ventilation was evaluated in terms of concentration distributions of welding fumes and grinding particles, flow field of the supply air and temperature distributions. Large differences in vertical stratification patterns between hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)) and other particulate contaminants were observed. The concentration of Cr(VI) was notably lower in the zone of occupancy than in the upper part of the factory hall, whereas the concentrations of total airborne particles and trivalent chromium (Cr(III)) were higher in the occupied zone than in the upper zone. The stratification of Cr(VI) had the same tendency as the air temperature stratification caused by the displacement flow field.

  12. Sheath oscillation characteristics and effect on near-wall conduction in a krypton Hall thruster

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Zhang, Fengkui, E-mail: fengkuizhang@163.com; Kong, Lingyi; Li, Chenliang

    2014-11-15

    Despite its affordability, the krypton Hall-effect thruster in applications always had problems in regard to performance. The reason for this degradation is studied from the perspective of the near-wall conductivity of electrons. Using the particle-in-cell method, the sheath oscillation characteristics and its effect on near-wall conduction are compared in the krypton and xenon Hall-effect thrusters both with wall material composed of BNSiO{sub 2}. Comparing these two thrusters, the sheath in the krypton-plasma thruster will oscillate at low electron temperatures. The near-wall conduction current is only produced by collisions between electrons and wall, thereby causing a deficiency in the channel current.more » The sheath displays spatial oscillations only at high electron temperature; electrons are then reflected to produce the non-oscillation conduction current needed for the krypton-plasma thruster. However, it is accompanied with intensified oscillations.« less

  13. Variables Control Charts: A Measurement Tool to Detect Process Problems within Housing

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Luna, Andrew

    1999-01-01

    The purpose of this study was to use quality improvement tools to determine if the current process of supplying hot water to a high-rise residence hall for women at a southeastern Doctoral I granting institution was in control. After a series of focus groups among the residents in the hall, it was determined that they were mostly concerned about…

  14. Hysteretic magnetoresistance and unconventional anomalous Hall effect in the frustrated magnet TmB 4

    DOE PAGES

    Sunku, Sai Swaroop; Kong, Tai; Ito, Toshimitsu; ...

    2016-05-11

    We study TmB 4, a frustrated magnet on the Archimedean Shastry-Sutherland lattice, through magnetization and transport experiments. The lack of anisotropy in resistivity shows that TmB4 is an electronically three-dimensional system. The magnetoresistance (MR) is hysteretic at low temperature even though a corresponding hysteresis in magnetization is absent. The Hall resistivity shows unconventional anomalous Hall effect (AHE) and is linear above saturation despite a large MR. In conclusion, we propose that complex structures at magnetic domain walls may be responsible for the hysteretic MR and may also lead to the AHE.

  15. Developments in Scanning Hall Probe Microscopy

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Chouinard, Taras; Chu, Ricky; David, Nigel; Broun, David

    2009-05-01

    Low temperature scanning Hall probe microscopy is a sensitive means of imaging magnetic structures with high spatial resolution and magnetic flux sensitivity approaching that of a Superconducting Quantum Interference Device. We have developed a scanning Hall probe microscope with novel features, including highly reliable coarse positioning, in situ optimization of sensor-sample alignment and capacitive transducers for linear, long range positioning measurement. This has been motivated by the need to reposition accurately above fabricated nanostructures such as small superconducting rings. Details of the design and performance will be presented as well as recent progress towards time-resolved measurements with sub nanosecond resolution.

  16. Performance and Environmental Test Results of the High Voltage Hall Accelerator Engineering Development Unit

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Kamhawi, Hani; Haag, Thomas; Huang, Wensheng; Shastry, Rohit; Pinero, Luis; Peterson, Todd; Mathers, Alex

    2012-01-01

    NASA Science Mission Directorate's In-Space Propulsion Technology Program is sponsoring the development of a 3.5 kW-class engineering development unit Hall thruster for implementation in NASA science and exploration missions. NASA Glenn and Aerojet are developing a high fidelity high voltage Hall accelerator that can achieve specific impulse magnitudes greater than 2,700 seconds and xenon throughput capability in excess of 300 kilograms. Performance, plume mappings, thermal characterization, and vibration tests of the high voltage Hall accelerator engineering development unit have been performed. Performance test results indicated that at 3.9 kW the thruster achieved a total thrust efficiency and specific impulse of 58%, and 2,700 sec, respectively. Thermal characterization tests indicated that the thruster component temperatures were within the prescribed material maximum operating temperature limits during full power thruster operation. Finally, thruster vibration tests indicated that the thruster survived the 3-axes qualification full-level random vibration test series. Pre and post-vibration test performance mappings indicated almost identical thruster performance. Finally, an update on the development progress of a power processing unit and a xenon feed system is provided.

  17. Room temperature magneto-transport properties of nanocomposite Fe-In2O3 thin films

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Tambasov, Igor A.; Gornakov, Kirill O.; Myagkov, Victor G.; Bykova, Liudmila E.; Zhigalov, Victor S.; Matsynin, Alexey A.; Yozhikova, Ekaterina V.

    2015-12-01

    A ferromagnetic Fe-In2O3 nanocomposite thin film has been synthesized by the thermite reaction Fe2O3+In→Fe-In2O3. Measurements of the Hall carrier concentration, Hall mobility and magnetoresistance have been conducted at room temperature. The nanocomposite Fe-In2O3 thin film had n=1.94·1020 cm-3, μ=6.45 cm2/Vs and negative magnetoresistance. The magnetoresistance for 8.8 kOe was ~-0.22%.The negative magnetoresistance was well described by the weak localization and model proposed by Khosla and Fischer.

  18. Synthesis of n-type semiconductor diamond single crystal under high pressure and high temperature

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Li, Yong; Li, Shangsheng; Song, Mousheng; She, Yanchao; Wang, Qiang; Guan, Xuemao

    2017-12-01

    In this paper, diamond single crystal co-doped with sulfur and boron was successfully synthesized at the fixed pressure of 6.0 GPa and temperature range of 1535 K. Sulfur was detected in the co-doped diamond by Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR) and the corresponding characteristic peak located at 848 cm-1. Interestingly, Hall effect measurements indicated that the diamond co-doped with sulfur and boron exhibited n-type semiconductor behaviour. Furthermore, the Hall mobility and carrier concentration of the co-doped diamond higher than those of the boron-doping diamond.

  19. Iodine Hall Thruster Propellant Feed System for a CubeSat

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Polzin, Kurt A.

    2014-01-01

    There has been significant work recently in the development of iodine-fed Hall thrusters for in-space propulsion applications.1 The use of iodine as a propellant provides many advantages over present xenon-gas-fed Hall thruster systems. Iodine is a solid at ambient temperature (no pressurization required) and has no special handling requirements, making it safe for secondary flight opportunities. It has exceptionally high ?I sp (density times specific impulse), making it an enabling technology for small satellite near-term applications and providing system level advantages over mid-term high power electric propulsion options. Iodine provides thrust and efficiency that are comparable to xenonfed Hall thrusters while operating in the same discharge current and voltage regime, making it possible to leverage the development of flight-qualified xenon Hall thruster power processing units for the iodine application. Work at MSFC is presently aimed at designing, integrating, and demonstrating a flight-like iodine feed system suitable for the Hall thruster application. This effort represents a significant advancement in state-of-the-art. Though Iodine thrusters have demonstrated high performance with mission enabling potential, a flight-like feed system has never been demonstrated and iodine compatible components do not yet exist. Presented in this paper is the end-to-end integrated feed system demonstration. The system includes a propellant tank with active feedback-control heating, fill and drain interfaces, latching and proportional flow control valves (PFCV), flow resistors, and flight-like CubeSat power and control electronics. Hardware is integrated into a CubeSat-sized structure, calibrated and tested under vacuum conditions, and operated under under hot-fire conditions using a Busek BHT-200 thruster designed for iodine. Performance of the system is evaluated thorugh accurate measurement of thrust and a calibrated of mass flow rate measurement, which is a function of reservoir temperature/pressure, the flow resistors, and the setting of the PFCV. The calibration is performed using independent flow control monitoring techniques, providing an in situ measure of the flowrate as a function of controllable parameters. The reservoir temperature controls the iodine sublimation rate, providing propellant to ths thruster by pressurizing the propellant feed system to approx.1-2 psi. Control of the temperature and the PFCV are used to maintain reservoir pressure and keep the thruster discharge current constant.

  20. Hydrodynamic Model for Density Gradients Instability in Hall Plasmas Thrusters

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Singh, Sukhmander

    2017-10-01

    There is an increasing interest for a correct understanding of purely growing electromagnetic and electrostatic instabilities driven by a plasma gradient in a Hall thruster devices. In Hall thrusters, which are typically operated with xenon, the thrust is provided by the acceleration of ions in the plasma generated in a discharge chamber. The goal of this paper is to study the instabilities due to gradients of plasma density and conditions for the growth rate and real part of the frequency for Hall thruster plasmas. Inhomogeneous plasmas prone a wide class of eigen modes induced by inhomogeneities of plasma density and called drift waves and instabilities. The growth rate of the instability has a dependences on the magnetic field, plasma density, ion temperature and wave numbers and initial drift velocities of the plasma species.

  1. Ultra-sensitive Hall sensors based on graphene encapsulated in hexagonal boron nitride

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Dauber, Jan; Stampfer, Christoph; Peter Grünberg Institute

    2015-05-11

    The encapsulation of graphene in hexagonal boron nitride provides graphene on substrate with excellent material quality. Here, we present the fabrication and characterization of Hall sensor elements based on graphene boron nitride heterostructures, where we gain from high mobility and low charge carrier density at room temperature. We show a detailed device characterization including Hall effect measurements under vacuum and ambient conditions. We achieve a current- and voltage-related sensitivity of up to 5700 V/AT and 3 V/VT, respectively, outpacing state-of-the-art silicon and III/V Hall sensor devices. Finally, we extract a magnetic resolution limited by low frequency electric noise of less than 50more » nT/√(Hz) making our graphene sensors highly interesting for industrial applications.« less

  2. Silicon-based microfabricated tin oxide gas sensor incorporating use of Hall effect measurement

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Hammond, Joseph Wilson

    2000-10-01

    Characterization of a microfabricated sol-gel derived nano-particle tin oxide thin film on a silicon substrate, through simultaneous measurement of conductivity, Hall mobility and electron density, had not been accomplished before this study. Conductivity is a function of carrier density and Hall mobility. Therefore, a full understanding of the sensing mechanism of tin oxide requires knowledge of the sensor conductivity, electron density and Hall mobility. A tin oxide thin film (1100A thick), derived by the sol-gel method, was deposited on a Si/SiO2 substrate by means of spin coating method. The sol-gel method produces films of porous interconnected nano-sized particles and is relatively inexpensive and easy to produce compared to existing methods of tin oxide thin film deposition. A goal of this study was to determine the compatibility of sol-gel derived tin oxide thin films with silicon based microfabrication procedures. It was determined that conductivity sensitivity is strongly dependant on electron density level and shows very weak dependence on Hall mobility. Lack of Hall mobility sensitivity to H2 concentration suggests that conduction is grain control limited. In this regime, in which the grain size (D) is less than twice the characteristic Debye length (LD), a change in reducing gas concentration results in a nearly simultaneous change in carrier density throughout the entire grain, while the Hall mobility remains unchanged. The sensor calcined at 500°C and operated at 250°C showed maximum conductivity sensitivity to H2 in air. The sensor exhibited a high conductivity sensitivity of 10.6 to 100ppm H2 in air with response time of (˜1) minute and recovery time of (˜4) minutes. Images of the thin film surface, obtained by SEM, were used to study the effects of calcination temperature and operating conditions on the tin oxide structure. Sensitivity decreased as average grain size increased from 7.7nm to 14.7nm, with increasing calcination temperature from 500°C to 800°C. The sensors displayed slight drift in long term baseline stability and good long term sensitivity stability (14 days). Long term operation (30 days) at elevated temperatures had no noticeable effect on the thin film structure.

  3. Magnetotransport properties of 8-Pmmn borophene: effects of Hall field and strain.

    PubMed

    Islam, S K Firoz

    2018-07-11

    The polymorph of 8-Pmmn borophene is an anisotropic Dirac material with tilted Dirac cones at two valleys. The tilting of the Dirac cones at two valleys are in opposite directions, which manifests itself via the valley dependent Landau levels in presence of an in-plane electric field (Hall field). The valley dependent Landau levels cause valley polarized magnetotransport properties in presence of the Hall field, which is in contrast to the monolayer graphene with isotropic non-tilted Dirac cones. The longitudinal conductivity and Hall conductivity are evaluated by using linear response theory in low temperature regime. An analytical approximate form of the longitudinal conductivity is also obtained. It is observed that the tilting of the Dirac cones amplifies the frequency of the longitudinal conductivity oscillation (Shubnikov-de Haas). On the other hand, the Hall conductivity exhibits graphene-like plateaus except the appearance of valley dependent steps which are purely attributed to the Hall field induced lifting of the valley degeneracy in the Landau levels. Finally we look into the different cases when the Hall field is applied to the strained borophene and find that valley dependency is fully dominated by strain rather than Hall field. Another noticeable point is that if the real magnetic field is replaced by the strain induced pseudo magnetic field then the electric field looses its ability to cause valley polarized transport.

  4. Performance Characterization of a Novel Plasma Thruster to Provide a Revolutionary Operationally Responsive Space Capability with Micro- and Nano-Satellites

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2011-03-24

    and radiation resistance of rare earth permanent magnets for applications such as ion thrusters and high efficiency Stirling Radioisotope Generators...from Electron Transitioning Discharge Current Discharge Power Discharge Voltage Θ Divergence Angle Earths Gravity at Sea Level...Hall effect thruster HIVAC High Voltage Hall Accelerator LEO Low Earth Orbit LDS Laser Displacement System LVDT Linear variable differential

  5. Anomalous Change of Hall Coefficient in Overdoped La2-xSrxCu1-yZnyO4 around x = 0.2

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Tonishi, Jun; Suzuki, Takao; Goto, Takayuki

    2006-09-01

    The Hall coefficient (RH) has been measured in 0.5% Zn-doped La2-xSrxCu0.995Zn0.005O4 under high magnetic fields up to 12 T. With decreasing temperature, RH increases and begins to decrease below a temperature TRH. This characteristic temperature TRH has the local maximum around x = 0.195, and this Sr-concentration coincides with that the superconducting transition temperature is slightly suppressed. This behavior is quite similar to the phenomena observed in the stripe phase in x ˜ 0.12. These results suggest that the anomalous decrease of RH around x = 0.195 observed in this study is responsible for the "1/4"-anomaly [as reported by Kakinuma et al., Phys. Rev. B 59, 1491 (1999).].

  6. The necessity of HVAC system for the registered architectural cultural heritage building

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Popovici, Cătălin George; Hudişteanu, Sebastian Valeriu; Cherecheş, Nelu-Cristian

    2018-02-01

    This study is intended to highlight the role of the ventilation and air conditioning system for a theatre. It was chosen as a case study the "Vasile Alecsandri" National Theatre of Jassy. The paper also sought to make a comparison in three distinct scenarios for HVAC Main Hall system - ventilation and air conditioning system of the Main Hall doesn't work; only the ventilation system of the Main Hall works and ventilation and air conditioning system of the Main Hall works. For analysing the comfort parameters, the ANSYS-Fluent software was used to build a 2D model of the building and simulation of HVAC system functionality during winter season, in all three scenarios. For the studied scenarios, the external conditions of Jassy and the indoor conditions of the theatre, when the entire spectacle hall is occupied were considered. The main aspects evaluated for each case were the air temperature, air velocity and relative humidity. The results are presented comparatively as plots and spectra of the interest parameters.

  7. Anomalous Hall hysteresis in T m3F e5O12/Pt with strain-induced perpendicular magnetic anisotropy

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Tang, Chi; Sellappan, Pathikumar; Liu, Yawen; Xu, Yadong; Garay, Javier E.; Shi, Jing

    2016-10-01

    We demonstrate robust interface strain-induced perpendicular magnetic anisotropy in atomically flat ferrimagnetic insulator T m3F e5O12 (TIG) films grown with pulsed laser deposition on a substituted G d3G a5O12 substrate which maximizes the tensile strain at the interface. In bilayers consisting of Pt and TIG, we observe large squared Hall hysteresis loops over a wide range of thicknesses of Pt at room temperature. When a thin Cu layer is inserted between Pt and TIG, the Hall hysteresis magnitude decays but stays finite as the thickness of Cu increases up to 5 nm. However, if the Cu layer is placed atop Pt instead, the Hall hysteresis magnitude is consistently larger than when the Cu layer with the same thickness is inserted in between for all Cu thicknesses. These results suggest that both the proximity-induced ferromagnetism and spin current contribute to the anomalous Hall effect.

  8. DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Xu, J.; Bugaris, D. E.; Xiao, Z. L.

    We report the occurrence of reentrantmetallic behavior in theWeyl semimetal NbP. When the appliedmagnetic field H is above a critical value H-c, a reentrance appears as a peak in the temperature-dependent resistivity rho(xx) (T) at T = T-p, similar to that observed in graphite where it was attributed to local superconductivity. The Tp(H) relationship follows a power-law dependence T-p similar to (H-H-c)(1/nu) where. can be derived from the temperature dependence of the zero-field resistivity rho(0)(T) similar to T-nu. From concurrent measurements of the transverse rho(xx) (T) and Hall rho(xy)(T) magnetoresistivities, we reveal a clear correlation between the rapidly increasing rho(xy)more » (T) and the occurrence of a peak in the rho(xx) (T) curve. Quantitative analysis indicates that the reentrantmetallic behavior arises from the competition of the magnetoconductivity sigma(xx) (T) with an additional component Delta sigma(xx) (T) = kappa(H)sigma(xx)(T) where kappa(H) = [rho(xy)(T)/rho(xx)(T)](2) is the Hall factor. We find that the Hall factor (kappa(H) approximate to 0.4) at peak temperature T-p is nearly field independent, leading to the observed T-p (H) relationship. Furthermore, the reentrant metallic behavior in rho(xx) (T) also is reflected in the behavior of rho(xx) (H) that ranges from nonsaturating at T > 70K to saturation at liquid-helium temperatures. The latter can be explained with the magnetic field dependence of the Hall factor kappa(H) (H). Our paper demonstrates that a semiclassical theory can account for the "anomalies" in the magnetotransport phenomena of NbP without invoking an exotic mechanism.« less

  9. Interface induced ferromagnetism in topological insulator above room temperature

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Tang, Chi; Chang, Cui-Zu; Liu, Yawen; Chen, Tingyong; Moodera, Jagadeesh; Shi, Jing

    The quantum anomalous Hall effect (QAHE) observed in magnetic topological insulators (TI), an outcome of time reversal symmetry broken surface states, exhibits many exotic properties. However, a major obstacle towards high temperature QAHE is the low Curie temperature in the disordered magnetically doped TI systems. Here we report a study on heterostructures of TI and magnetic insulator in which the magnetic insulator, namely thulium iron garnet or TIG, has perpendicular magnetic anisotropy. At the TIG/TI interface, TIG magnetizes the surface states of the TI film by exchange coupling, as revealed by the anomalous Hall effect (AHE). We demonstrate that squared AHE hysteresis loops persist well above room temperature. The interface proximity induced high-temperature ferromagnetism in topological insulators opens up new possibilities for the realization of QAHE at high temperatures. This work was supported as part of the SHINES, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences under Award # SC0012670.

  10. Hall coefficient measurement for residual stress assessment in precipitation hardened IN718 nickel-base superalloy

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Velicheti, Dheeraj; Nagy, Peter B.; Hassan, Waled

    2017-02-01

    We investigated the feasibility of residual stress assessment based on Hall coefficient measurements in precipitation hardened IN718 nickel-base superalloy. As a first step, we studied the influence of microstructural variations on the galvanomagnetic properties of IN718 nickel-base superalloy. We found that the Hall coefficient of IN718 increases from ≈ 8.0×10-11 m3/C in its fully annealed state of 15 HRC Rockwell hardness to ≈ 9.4×10-11 m3/C in its fully hardened state of 45 HRC. We also studied the influence of cold work, i.e., plastic deformation, at room temperature and found that cold work had negligible effect on the Hall coefficient of fully annealed IN718, but significantly reduced it in hardened states of the material. For example, measurements conducted on fully hardened IN718 specimens showed that the Hall coefficient decreased more or less linearly with cold work from its peak value of ≈ 9.4×10-11 m3/C in its intact state to ≈ 9.0×10-11 m3/C in its most deformed state of 22% plastic strain. We also studied the influence of applied stress and found that elastic strain significantly increases the Hall coefficient of IN718 regardless of the state of hardening. The relative sensitivity of the Hall coefficient to elastic strain was measured as a unitless gauge factor K that is defined as the ratio of the relative change of the Hall coefficient ΔRH/RH divided by the axial strain ɛ = σ/E, where σ is the applied uniaxial stress and E is the Young's modulus of the material. We determined that the galvanomagnetic gauge factor of IN718 is κ ≈ 2.6 - 2.9 depending on the hardness level. Besides the fairly high value of the gauge factor, it is important that it is positive, which means that compressive stress in surface-treated components decreases the Hall coefficient in a similar way as plastic deformation does, therefore the unfortunate cancellation that occurs in fully hardened IN718 in the case of electric conductivity measurements will not happen in this case. Additionally, the temperature dependence of the Hall coefficient was measured at three different hardness levels and the influence of thermal exposure was studied in fully hardened IN718 up to 700 °C.

  11. Development of internal magnetic probe for current density profile measurement in Versatile Experiment Spherical Torus

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Yang, J.; Lee, J. W.; Jung, B. K.; Chung, K. J.; Hwang, Y. S.

    2014-11-01

    An internal magnetic probe using Hall sensors to measure a current density profile directly with perturbation of less than 10% to the plasma current is successfully operated for the first time in Versatile Experiment Spherical Torus (VEST). An appropriate Hall sensor is chosen to produce sufficient signals for VEST magnetic field while maintaining the small size of 10 mm in outer diameter. Temperature around the Hall sensor in a typical VEST plasma is regulated by blown air of 2 bars. First measurement of 60 kA VEST ohmic discharge shows a reasonable agreement with the total plasma current measured by Rogowski coil in VEST.

  12. PERSPECTIVE Working towards a community-wide understanding of satellite skin temperature observations

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Shreve, Cheney

    2010-12-01

    With more than sixty free and publicly available high-quality datasets, including ecosystem variables, radiation budget variables, and land cover products, the MODIS instrument and the MODIS scientific team have contributed significantly to scientific investigations of ecosystems across the globe. The MODIS instrument, launched in December 1999, has 36 spectral bands, a viewing swath of 2330 km, and acquires data at 250 m, 500 m, and 1000 m spatial resolution every one to two days. Radiation budget variables include surface reflectance, skin temperature, emissivity, and albedo, to list a few. Ecosystem variables include several vegetation indices and productivity measures. Land cover characteristics encompass land cover classifications as well as model parameters and vegetation classifications. Many of these products are instrumental in constraining global climate models and climate change studies, as well as monitoring events such as the recent flooding in Pakistan, the unprecedented oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, or phytoplankton bloom in the Barents Sea. While product validation efforts by the MODIS scientific team are both vigorous and continually improving, validation is unquestionably one of the most difficult tasks when dealing with remotely derived datasets, especially at the global scale. The quality and availability of MODIS data have led to widespread usage in the scientific community that has further contributed to validation and development of the MODIS products. In their recent paper entitled 'Land surface skin temperature climatology: benefitting from the strengths of satellite observations', Jin and Dickinson review the scientific theory behind, and demonstrate application of, a MODIS temperature product: surface skin temperature. Utilizing datasets from the Global Historical Climatological Network (GHCN), daily skin and air temperature from the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) program, and MODIS products (skin temperature, albedo, land cover, water vapor, cloud cover), they show that skin temperature is clearly a different physical parameter from air temperature and varies from air temperature in magnitude, response to atmospheric conditions, and diurnal phase. Although the accuracy of skin temperature (Tskin) algorithms has improved to within 0.5-1°C for field measurements and clear-sky satellite observations (Becker and Li 1995, Goetz et al 1995, Wan and Dozier 1996), general confusion regarding the physical definition of 'surface temperature' and how it can be used for climate studies has persisted throughout the scientific community and limited the applications of these data (Jin and Dickinson 2010). For example, satellite sea surface temperature was used as evidence of global climate change instead of skin temperature in the IPCC 2001 and 2007 reports (Jin and Dickinson 2010). This work provides clarity in the theoretical definition of temperature variables, demonstrates the difference between air and skin temperature, and aids the understanding of the MODIS Tskin product, which could be very beneficial for future climate studies. As outlined by Jin and Dickinson, 'surface temperature' is a vague term commonly used in reference to air temperature, aerodynamic temperature, and skin temperature. Air temperature (Tair), or thermodynamic temperature, is measured by an in situ instrument usually 1.5-2 m above the ground. Aerodynamic temperature (Taero) refers to the temperature at the height of the roughness length of heat. Satellite derived skin temperature (Tskin) is the radiometric temperature derived from the inverse of Planck's function. While these different temperature variables are typically correlated, they differ as a result of environmental conditions (e.g. land cover and sky conditions; Jin and Dickinson 2010). With an extensive network of Tair measurements, some have questioned the benefits of using Tskin at all (Peterson et al 1997, 1998). Tskin and Tair can vary depending on land cover or sky conditions and variations may be large, e.g., for sparsely vegetated areas where net radiation is largely balanced by sensible heat flux (Hall et al 1992, Sun and Mahrt 1995, Jin et al 1997). Tskin can be higher than Taero at midday and lower at night (Sun and Mahrt 1995) and some models use Taero to approximate surface radiative temperature (Hubband and Monteith 1986). One of the strengths of the MODIS instrument is the simultaneous collection of surface and atmospheric conditions. By incorporating a range of MODIS variables in their comparison to Tskin, the authors examine the relationship of Tskin to atmospheric and surface conditions. Results from their global evaluation of Tskin highlight its variability on an inter-annual basis, its variation with solar zenith angle, and diurnal variations, which are not achievable with Tair measurements. Comparison with land cover type illustrates the seasonality of Tskin for different land covers. Comparison with the enhanced vegetation index (EVI) suggests more vegetation reduces skin temperature. Using the MODIS albedo, they demonstrate a clear relationship between yearly averaged Tskin and land surface albedo. Lastly, their examination of water vapor and cloud cover in comparison to Tskin suggests similar seasonality between these two variables. The MODIS Tskin product is not without uncertainty; retrieving Tskin requires a calculation of radiative transfer to account for atmospheric emission and molecular absorption, which is time and resource intensive (Jin and Dickinson 2010). Additionally, surface emissivity, instrument noise, and view angle geometry contribute to error in Tskin estimations (Jin and Dickinson 2010). The transparency of the scientific theory underlying this work, and the clear demonstration of the distinction between temperature measures on varying scales, demonstrates the usefulness of Tskin despite the uncertainties. Perhaps equally as important is the tone; in a time when the controversy surrounding climate change is peaking and the very ethics of the scientific community are being questioned, it is more critical than ever to be transparent in one's work and to assist the scientific community in understanding the tools we have available to us for investigating climate change. References Becker F and Li Z-L 1995 Surface temperature and emissivity at different scales: definition, measurement and related problems Remote Sensing Rev. 12 225-53 Goetz S J, Halthore R, Hall F G and Markham B L 1995 Surface temperature retrieval in a temperate grassland with multi-resolution sensors J. Geophys. Res. Atmos. 100 25397-410 Hall F G, Huemmrich K F, Goetz P J, Sellers P J and Nickeson J E 1992 Satellite remote sensing of the surface energy balance: success, failures and unresolved issues in FIFE J. Geophys. Res. Atmos. 97 19061-90 Jin M and Dickinson R E 2010 Land surface skin temperature climatology: benefitting from the strengths of satellite observations Environ. Res. Lett. 5 044004 Jin M, Dickinson R E and Vogelmann A M 1997 A comparison of CCM2/BATS skin temperature and surface-air temperature with satellite and surface observations J. Climate 10 1505-24 Hubband N D S and Monteith J L 1986 Radiative surface temperature and energy balance of a wheat canopy Boundary Layer Meteorol. 36 107-16 Peterson T C and Vose R S 1997 An overview of the Global Historical Climatology Network temperature data base Bull. Am. Meteorol. Soc. 78 2837-49 Peterson T C, Karl T R, Jamason P F, Knight R and Easterling D R 1998 The first difference method: maximizing station density for the calculation of long-term global temperature change J. Geophys. Res. Atmos. 103 25967-74 Sun J and Mahrt L 1995 Determination of surface fluxes from the surface radiative temperature Atmos. Sci. 52 1096-106 Wan Z and Dozier J 1996 A generalized split-window algorithm for retrieving land-surface temperature from space IEEE Trans. Geosci. Remote Sensing 34 892-905

  13. Scanning Hall probe microscopy of a diluted magnetic semiconductor

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kweon, Seongsoo; Samarth, Nitin; de Lozanne, Alex

    2009-05-01

    We have measured the micromagnetic properties of a diluted magnetic semiconductor as a function of temperature and applied field with a scanning Hall probe microscope built in our laboratory. The design philosophy for this microscope and some details are described. The samples analyzed in this work are Ga0.94Mn0.06As films grown by molecular beam epitaxy. We find that the magnetic domains are 2-4 μm wide and fairly stable with temperature. Magnetic clusters are observed above TC, which we ascribe to MnAs defects too small and sparse to be detected by a superconducting quantum interference device magnetometer.

  14. The temperature dependence of the conductivity peak values in the single and the double quantum well nanostructures n-InGaAs/GaAs after IR-illumination

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Arapov, Yu. G.; Gudina, S. V.; Klepikova, A. S., E-mail: klepikova@imp.uran.ru

    2017-02-15

    The dependences of the longitudinal and Hall resistances on a magnetic field in n-InGaAs/GaAs heterostructures with a single and double quantum wells after infrared illumination are measured in the range of magnetic fields Ð’ = 0–16 T and temperatures T = 0.05–4.2 K. Analysis of the experimental results was carried out on a base of two-parameter scaling hypothesis for the integer quantum Hall effect. The value of the second (irrelevant) critical exponent of the theory of two-parameter scaling was estimated.

  15. Hall effects on peristalsis of boron nitride-ethylene glycol nanofluid with temperature dependent thermal conductivity

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Abbasi, F. M.; Gul, Maimoona; Shehzad, S. A.

    2018-05-01

    Current study provides a comprehensive numerical investigation of the peristaltic transport of boron nitride-ethylene glycol nanofluid through a symmetric channel in presence of magnetic field. Significant effects of Brownian motion and thermophoresis have been included in the energy equation. Hall and Ohmic heating effects are also taken into consideration. Resulting system of non-linear equations is solved numerically using NDSolve in Mathematica. Expressions for velocity, temperature, concentration and streamlines are derived and plotted under the assumption of long wavelength and low Reynolds number. Influence of various parameters on heat and mass transfer rates have been discussed with the help of bar charts.

  16. Fluctuations and instabilities of a holographic metal

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Jokela, Niko; Järvinen, Matti; Lippert, Matthew

    2013-02-01

    We analyze the quasinormal modes of the D2-D8' model of 2+1-dimensional, strongly-coupled, charged fermions in a background magnetic field and at non-zero density. The model is known to include a quantum Hall phase with integer filling fraction. As expected, we find a hydrodynamical diffusion mode at small momentum and the nonzero-temperature holographic zero sound, which becomes massive above a critical magnetic field. We confirm the previously-known thermodynamic instability. In addition, we discover an instability at low temperature, large mass, and in a charge density and magnetic field range near the quantum Hall phase to an inhomogeneous striped phase.

  17. Nonlinear Hall effect and multichannel conduction in LaTiO3/SrTiO3 superlattices

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Kim, Jun Sung; Seo, Sung Seok A; Chisholm, Matthew F

    2010-01-01

    We report magnetotransport properties of heterointerfaces between the Mott insulator LaTiO{sub 3} and the band insulator SrTiO{sub 3} in a delta-doping geometry. At low temperatures, we have found a strong nonlinearity in the magnetic field dependence of the Hall resistivity, which can be effectively controlled by varying the temperature and the electric field. We attribute this effect to multichannel conduction of interfacial charges generated by an electronic reconstruction. In particular, the formation of a highly mobile conduction channel revealed by our data is explained by the greatly increased dielectric permeability of SrTiO{sub 3} at low temperatures and its electric fieldmore » dependence reflects the spatial distribution of the quasi-two-dimensional electron gas.« less

  18. Experimental evidence consistent with a magnon Nernst effect in the antiferromagnetic insulator MnPS3

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Shiomi, Y.; Takashima, R.; Saitoh, E.

    2017-10-01

    A magnon Nernst effect, an antiferromagnetic analog of the magnon Hall effect in ferromagnetic insulators, has been studied experimentally for the layered antiferromagnetic insulator MnPS3 in contact with two Pt strips. Thermoelectric voltage in the Pt strips grown on MnPS3 single crystals exhibits nonmonotonic temperature dependence at low temperatures, which is unlikely to be explained by electronic origins in Pt but can be ascribed to the inverse spin Hall voltage induced by a magnon Nernst effect. Control of antiferromagnetic domains in the MnPS3 crystal by magnetoelectric cooling is found to modulate the low-temperature thermoelectric voltage in Pt, which is evidence consistent with the emergence of the magnon Nernst effect in Pt-MnPS3 hybrid structures.

  19. Annealing effect on current-driven domain wall motion in Pt/[Co/Ni] wire

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Furuta, Masaki; Liu, Yang; Sepehri-Amin, Hossein; Hono, Kazuhiro; Zhu, Jian-Gang Jimmy

    2017-09-01

    The annealing effect on the efficiency of current-driven domain wall motion governed by the spin Hall effect in perpendicularly magnetized Pt/[Co/Ni] wires is investigated experimentally. Important physical parameters, such as the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya Interaction (DMI), spin Hall angle, and perpendicular anisotropy field strength, for the domain wall motion are all characterized at each annealing temperature. It is found that annealing of wires at temperatures over 120 °C causes significant reduction of the domain wall velocity. Energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy analysis shows pronounced Co diffusion across the Pt/Co interface resulted from annealing at relatively high temperatures. The combined modeling study shows that the reduction of DMI caused by annealing is mostly responsible for the domain wall velocity reduction due to annealing.

  20. Transport, Optical, and Magnetic Properties of the Conducting Halide Perovskite CH 3NH 3SnI 3

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Mitzi, D. B.; Feild, C. A.; Schlesinger, Z.; Laibowitz, R. B.

    1995-01-01

    A low-temperature ( T ≤ 100°C) solution technique is described for the preparation of polycrystalline and single crystal samples of the conducting halide perovskite, CH 3NH 3SnI 3. Transport, Hall effect, magnetic, and optical properties are examined over the temperature range 1.8-300 K, confirming that this unusual conducting halide perovskite is a low carrier density p-type metal with a Hall hole density, 1/ RHe ≃ 2 × 10 19 cm -3. The resistivity of pressed pellet samples decreases with decreasing temperature with resistivity ratio ρ(300 K)/ρ(2 K) ≃ 3 and room temperature resistivity ρ(300 K) ≃ 7 mΩ-cm. A free-carrier infrared reflectivity spectrum with a plasma edge observed at approximately 1600 cm -1 further attests to the metallic nature of this compound and suggests a small optical effective mass, m* ≃ 0.2.

  1. High-Efficiency Helical Coil Electromagnetic Launcher and High Power Hall-Effect Switch

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2008-02-29

    also given that demonstrate significant launcher performance benefits by super-cooling the armature (i.e., using liquid nitrogen ). 14. ABSTRACT... liquid nitrogen temperatures). A computer model for a magnetically-controlled Hall-effect switch is developed. The model is constructed in the PSpice...of super-cooling is demonstrated with liquid nitrogen cooling and indicates super-cooled EML operation is desirable if cryo-cooling is practical for

  2. Novel behaviors of anomalous Hall effect in TbFeCo ferrimagnetic thin films

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ando, Ryo; Komine, Takashi; Sato, Shiori; Kaneta, Shingo; Hara, Yoshiaki

    2018-05-01

    We investigate the temperature dependence and the thickness dependence of anomalous Hall effect (AHE) of TbFeCo ultra-thin films under high magnetic field. The sign change on temperature dependence of AHE in 20nm-thick TbFeCo film with rare-earth (RE) rich composition was observed. The AHE sign at low temperature is negative while it gradually becomes positive as the temperature increases. Moreover, the AHE sign for 5nm-thick TbFeCo film remains positive while that for 50nm-thick TbFeCo film remains negative at temperature in the range from 5 K to 400 K. The similar thickness dependence of AHE in TM-rich samples was also observed. From the mean-field approximation, the sign change temperature in AHE is related to the compensation temperature and the existence of interfacial region, which has the TM-rich composition and the weak anisotropy. Therefore, We clarified that the novel behavior of AHE sign changes in TbFeCo thin films with different thickness can be explained by the interfacial layer with weak anisotropy and two phase model.

  3. Forced Atlantic Multidecadal Variability Over the Past Millennium

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Halloran, P. R.; Reynolds, D.; Scourse, J. D.; Hall, I. R.

    2016-02-01

    Paul R. Halloran, David J. Reynolds, Ian R. Hall and James D. Scourse Multidecadal variability in Atlantic sea surface temperatures (SSTs) plays a first order role in determining regional atmospheric circulation and moisture transport, with major climatic consequences. These regional climate impacts range from drought in the Sahel and South America, though increased hurricane activity and temperature extremes, to modified monsoonal rainfall. Multidecadal Atlantic SST variability could arise through internal variability in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) (e.g., Knight et al., 2006), or through externally forced change (e.g. Booth et al., 2012). It is critical that we know whether internal or external forcing dominates if we are to provide useful near-term climate projections in the Atlantic region. A persuasive argument that internal variability plays an important role in Atlantic Multidecadal Variability is that periodic SST variability has been observed throughout much of the last millennium (Mann et al., 2009), and the hypothesized external forcing of historical Atlantic Multidecadal Variability (Booth et al., 2012) is largely anthropogenic in origin. Here we combine the first annually-resolved millennial marine reconstruction with multi-model analysis, to show that the Atlantic SST variability of the last millennium can be explained by a combination of direct volcanic forcing, and indirect, forced, AMOC variability. Our results indicate that whilst climate models capture the timing of both the directly forced SST and forced AMOC-mediated SST variability, the models fail to capture the magnitude of the forced AMOC change. Does this mean that models underestimate the 21st century reduction in AMOC strength? J. Knight, C. Folland and A. Scaife., Climate impacts of the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation, GRL, 2006 B.B.B Booth, N. Dunstone, P.R. Halloran et al., Aerosols implicated as a prime driver of twentieth-century North Atlantic climate variability, Nature, 2012 M.E. Mann, Z. Zhang, S. Rutherford et al., Global Signatures and Dynamical Origins of the Little Ice Age and Medieval Climate Anomaly, Science, 2009

  4. High temperature hall effect measurement system design, measurement and analysis

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Berkun, Isil

    A reliable knowledge of the transport properties of semiconductor materials is essential for the development and understanding of a number of electronic devices. In this thesis, the work on developing a Hall Effect measurement system with software based data acqui- sition and control for a temperature range of 300K-700K will be described. A system was developed for high temperature measurements of materials including single crystal diamond, poly-crystalline diamond, and thermoelectric compounds. An added capability for monitor- ing the current versus voltage behavior of the contacts was used for studying the influence of ohmic and non-ohmic contacts on Hall Effect measurements. The system has been primar- ily used for testing the transport properties of boron-doped single crystal diamond (SCD) deposited in a microwave plasma-assisted chemical vapor deposition (MPCVD) reactor [1]. Diamond has several outstanding properties that are of high interest for its development as an electronic material. These include a relatively wide band gap of 5.5 (eV), high thermal conductivity, high mobility, high saturation velocity, and a high breakdown voltage. For a temperature range of 300K-700K, IV curves, Hall mobilities and carrier concentrations are shown. Temperature dependent Hall effect measurements have shown carrier concentrations from below 1017cm --3 to approximately 1021 cm--3 with mobilities ranging from 763( cm2/V s) to 0.15(cm 2/V s) respectively. Simulation results have shown the effects of single and mixed carrier models, activation energies, effective mass and doping concentrations. These studies have been helpful in the development of single crystal diamond for diode applications. Reference materials of Ge and GaAs were used to test the Hall Effect system. The system was also used to characterize polycrystalline diamond deposited on glass for electrochemical applications, and Mg2(Si,Sn) compounds which are promising candidates of low-cost, light weight and non-toxic thermoelectric materials made from abundant elements and are suited for power generation application in the intermediate temperature range of (600 K - 800 K). In this work the thermoelectric materials were synthesized by a solid-state reac- tion using a molten-salt sealing method. The ingots produced were then powder processed, followed by pulsed electric sintering (PECS) densification. A set of Mg2.08Si0.4--x Sn0.6Sbx (0 ≤ x ≤ 0.072) compounds were investigated and a peak ZT of 1.50 was obtained at 716 K in Mg2.08Si 0.364Sn0.6Sb0.036 [2]. The high ZT value is related to a high electrical conductivity in these samples, which are possibly caused by a magnesium deficiency in the final prod- uct. Analysis of the measured results using LabVIEW and MATLAB developed programs showed good agreement with expected results and gave insight on mixed carrier dopant concentrations. [1] I. Berkun, S. N. Demlow, N. Suwanmonkha, T. P. Hogan, and T. A. Grotjohn, "Hall Effect Measurement System for Characterization of Doped Single Crystal Diamond," in MRS Proceedings, vol. 1511, Cambridge Univ Press, 2013. [2] P. Gao, I. Berkun, R. D. Schmidt, M. F. Luzenski, X. Lu, P. B. Sarac, E. D. Case, and T. P. Hogan, "Transport and Mechanical Properties of High-ZT Mg2. 08si0. 4- x Sn0. 6sb x Thermoelectric Materials," Journal of Electronic Materials, pp. 1--14, 2013.

  5. Fabry-Perot Interferometry in the Integer and Fractional Quantum Hall Regimes

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    McClure, Douglas; Chang, Willy; Kou, Angela; Marcus, Charles; Pfeiffer, Loren; West, Ken

    2011-03-01

    We present measurements of electronic Fabry-Perot interferometers in the integer and fractional quantum Hall regimes. Two classes of resistance oscillations may be seen as a function of magnetic field and gate voltage, as we have previously reported. In small interferometers in the integer regime, oscillations of the type associated with Coulomb interaction are ubiquitous, while those consistent with single-particle Aharonov-Bohm interference are seen to co-exist in some configurations. The amplitude scaling of both types with temperature and device size is consistent with a theoretical model. Oscillations are further observed in the fractional quantum Hall regime. Here the dependence of the period on the filling factors in the constrictions and bulk of the interferometer can shed light on the effective charge of the interfering quasiparticles, but care is needed to distinguish these oscillations from those associated with integer quantum Hall states. We acknowledge funding from Microsoft Project Q and IBM.

  6. Impact of the Hall effect on high-energy-density plasma jets.

    PubMed

    Gourdain, P-A; Seyler, C E

    2013-01-04

    Using a 1-MA, 100 ns-rise-time pulsed power generator, radial foil configurations can produce strongly collimated plasma jets. The resulting jets have electron densities on the order of 10(20) cm(-3), temperatures above 50 eV and plasma velocities on the order of 100 km/s, giving Reynolds numbers of the order of 10(3), magnetic Reynolds and Péclet numbers on the order of 1. While Hall physics does not dominate jet dynamics due to the large particle density and flow inside, it strongly impacts flows in the jet periphery where plasma density is low. As a result, Hall physics affects indirectly the geometrical shape of the jet and its density profile. The comparison between experiments and numerical simulations demonstrates that the Hall term enhances the jet density when the plasma current flows away from the jet compared to the case where the plasma current flows towards it.

  7. Polynomial-interpolation algorithm for van der Pauw Hall measurement in a metal hydride film

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Koon, D. W.; Ares, J. R.; Leardini, F.; Fernández, J. F.; Ferrer, I. J.

    2008-10-01

    We apply a four-term polynomial-interpolation extension of the van der Pauw Hall measurement technique to a 330 nm Mg-Pd bilayer during both absorption and desorption of hydrogen at room temperature. We show that standard versions of the van der Pauw DC Hall measurement technique produce an error of over 100% due to a drifting offset signal and can lead to unphysical interpretations of the physical processes occurring in this film. The four-term technique effectively removes this source of error, even when the offset signal is drifting by an amount larger than the Hall signal in the time interval between successive measurements. This technique can be used to increase the resolution of transport studies of any material in which the resistivity is rapidly changing, particularly when the material is changing from metallic to insulating behavior.

  8. Quantum Hall ferromagnets and transport properties of buckled Dirac materials

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Luo, Wenchen; Chakraborty, Tapash

    2015-10-01

    We study the ground states and low-energy excitations of a generic Dirac material with spin-orbit coupling and a buckling structure in the presence of a magnetic field. The ground states can be classified into three types under different conditions: SU(2), easy-plane, and Ising quantum Hall ferromagnets. For the SU(2) and the easy-plane quantum Hall ferromagnets there are goldstone modes in the collective excitations, while all the modes are gapped in an Ising-type ground state. We compare the Ising quantum Hall ferromagnet with that of bilayer graphene and present the domain-wall solution at finite temperatures. We then specify the phase transitions and transport gaps in silicene in Landau levels 0 and 1. The phase diagram depends strongly on the magnetic field and the dielectric constant. We note that there exist triple points in the phase diagrams in Landau level N =1 that could be observed in experiments.

  9. Electrical properties of epitaxial yttrium iron garnet ultrathin films at high temperatures

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Thiery, N.; Naletov, V. V.; Vila, L.; Marty, A.; Brenac, A.; Jacquot, J.-F.; de Loubens, G.; Viret, M.; Anane, A.; Cros, V.; Ben Youssef, J.; Beaulieu, N.; Demidov, V. E.; Divinskiy, B.; Demokritov, S. O.; Klein, O.

    2018-02-01

    We report a study on the electrical properties of 19-nm-thick yttrium iron garnet (YIG) films grown by liquid phase epitaxy on gadolinium gallium garnet single crystal. The electrical conductivity and Hall coefficient are measured in the high-temperature range [300,400] K using a Van der Pauw four-point probe technique. We find that the electrical resistivity decreases exponentially with increasing temperature following an activated behavior corresponding to a band gap of Eg≈2 eV. It drops to values about 5 ×103Ω cm at T =400 K, thus indicating that epitaxial YIG ultrathin films behave as large gap semiconductors. We also infer the Hall mobility, which is found to be positive (p type) at 5 cm2V-1sec-1 and almost independent of temperature. We discuss the consequence for nonlocal spin transport experiments performed on YIG at room temperature and demonstrate the existence of electrical offset voltages to be disentangled from pure spin effects.

  10. Magnetically Orchestrated Formation of Diamond at Lower Temperatures and Pressures

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Little, Reginald B.; Lochner, Eric; Goddard, Robert

    2005-01-01

    Man's curiosity and fascination with diamonds date back to ancient times. The knowledge of the many properties of diamond is recorded during Biblical times. Antoine Lavoisier determined the composition of diamond by burning in O2 to form CO2. With the then existing awareness of graphite as carbon, the race began to convert graphite to diamond. The selective chemical synthesis of diamond has been pursued by Cagniard, Hannay, Moisson and Parson. On the basis of the thermodynamically predicted equilibrium line of diamond and graphite, P W Bridgman attempted extraordinary conditions of high temperature (>2200°C) and pressure (>100,000 atm) for the allotropic conversion of graphite to diamond. H T Hall was the first to successfully form bulk diamond by realizing the kinetic restrictions to Bridgman's (thermodynamic) high pressure high temperature direct allotropic conversion. Moreover, Hall identified catalysts for the faster kinetics of diamond formation. H M Strong determined the import of the liquid catalyst during Hall's catalytic synthesis. W G Eversole discovered the slow metastable low pressure diamond formation by pyrolytic chemical vapor deposition with the molecular hydrogen etching of the rapidly forming stable graphitic carbon. J C Angus determined the import of atomic hydrogen for faster etching for faster diamond growth at low pressure. S Matsumoto has developed plasma and hot filament technology for faster hydrogen and carbon radical generations at low pressure for faster diamond formation. However the metastable low pressure chemical vapor depositions by plasma and hot filament are prone to polycrystalline films. From Bridgman to Hall to Eversole, Angus and Matsumoto, much knowledge has developed of the importance of pressure, temperature, transition metal catalyst, liquid state of metal (metal radicals atoms) and the carbon radical intermediates for diamond synthesis. Here we advance this understanding of diamond formation by demonstrating the external magnetic organization of carbon, metal and hydrogen radicals for lower temperature and pressure synthesis. Here we show that strong static external magnetic field (>15 T) enhances the formation of single crystal diamond at lower pressure and even atmospheric pressure with implications for much better, faster high quality diamond formation by magnetization of current high pressure and temperature technology.

  11. Temperature dependence of spin-orbit torques in Pt/Co/Pt multilayers

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Chen, Shiwei; Li, Dong; Cui, Baoshan; Xi, Li; Si, Mingsu; Yang, Dezheng; Xue, Desheng

    2018-03-01

    We studied the current-induced spin-orbit torques in a perpendicularly magnetized Pt (1 nm)/Co (0.8 nm)/Pt (5 nm) heterojunction by harmonic Hall voltage measurements. Owing to similar Pt/Co/Pt interfaces, the spin-orbit torques originated from the Rashba effect are reduced, but the contribution from the spin Hall effect is still retained because of asymmetrical Pt thicknesses. When the temperature increases from 50 to 300 K, two orthogonal components of the effective field, induced by spin-orbit torques, reveal opposite temperature dependencies: the field-like term (transverse effective field) decreases from 2.3 to 2.1 (10-6 Oe (A cm-2)-1), whereas the damping-like term (longitudinal effective field) increases from 3.7 to 4.8 (10-6 Oe (A cm-2)-1). It is noticed that the damping-like term, usually smaller than the field-like term in the similar Pt/Co interfaces, is twice as large as the field-like term. As a result, the damping-like spin-orbit torque reaches an efficiency of 0.15 at 300 K. Such a temperature-dependent damping-like term in a Pt/Co/Pt heterojunction can efficiently reduce the switching current density which is 2.30  ×  106 A cm-2 at 300 K, providing an opportunity to further improve and understand spin-orbit torques induced by spin Hall effect.

  12. Evidence for the absence of electron-electron Coulomb interaction quantum correction to the anomalous Hall effect in Co2FeSi Heusler-alloy thin films

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Hazra, Binoy Krishna; Kaul, S. N.; Srinath, S.; Raja, M. Manivel; Rawat, R.; Lakhani, Archana

    2017-11-01

    Electrical (longitudinal) resistivity ρx x, at H =0 and H =80 kOe, anomalous Hall resistivity ρxy A H, and magnetization M , have been measured at different temperatures in the range 5-300 K on the Co2FeSi (CFS) Heusler-alloy thin films, grown on Si(111) substrate, with thickness ranging from 12 to 100 nm. At fixed fields H =0 and H =80 kOe, ρx x(T ) goes through a minimum at T =Tmin (which depends on the film thickness) in all the CFS thin films. In sharp contrast, both the anomalous Hall coefficient RA and ρxy A H monotonously increase with temperature without exhibiting a minimum. Elaborate analyses of ρx x, RA, and ρxy A H establishes the following. (i) The enhanced electron-electron Coulomb interaction (EEI) quantum correction (QC) is solely responsible for the upturn in "zero-field" and "in-field" ρx x(T ) at T

  13. Application of galvanomagnetic measurements in temperature range 70-300 K to MBE GaAs layers characterization

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Wolkenberg, Andrzej; Przeslawski, Tomasz

    1996-04-01

    Galvanomagnetic measurements were performed on the square shaped samples after Van der Pauw and on the Hall bar at low electric fields app. 1.5 V/cm and magnetic induction app. 6 kG in order to make a comparison between the theoretical and experimental results of the temperature dependence of mobility and resistivity from 70 K to 300 K. A calculation method was obtained of the drift mobility and the Hall mobility in which the scatterings are applied: on ionized impurities, on polar optical phonons, on acoustic phonons (deformation potential), on acoustic phonons (piezoelectric potential) and on dislocations. The elaborated method transformed to a computer program allows us to fit experimental values of the resistivity and the Hall mobility to those calculated. The fitting procedure makes it possible to characterize the quality of the n-type GaAs MBE layer, i.e. the net electron concentration, whole ionized impurities concentration and dislocation density after Read space charge cylinders model. The calculations together with the measurements allow us to obtain compensation ratio value in the layer, too. The influence of the epitaxial layer thickness on layers measurements accuracy in the case of Van der Pauw square probe was investigated. It was stated that in the layers under 3 micrometer the bulk properties are strongly influenced by both surfaces. The results of measurements of the same layer using the Van der Pauw and the Hall bar structure were compared. It was stated that the Hall bar structure only could be used to obtain proper measurements results.

  14. Mini array of quantum Hall devices based on epitaxial graphene

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Novikov, S.; Lebedeva, N.; Hämäläinen, J.

    2016-05-07

    Series connection of four quantum Hall effect (QHE) devices based on epitaxial graphene films was studied for realization of a quantum resistance standard with an up-scaled value. The tested devices showed quantum Hall plateaux R{sub H,2} at a filling factor v = 2 starting from a relatively low magnetic field (between 4 T and 5 T) when the temperature was 1.5 K. The precision measurements of quantized Hall resistance of four QHE devices connected by triple series connections and external bonding wires were done at B = 7 T and T = 1.5 K using a commercial precision resistance bridge with 50 μA current through the QHE device. The results showed thatmore » the deviation of the quantized Hall resistance of the series connection of four graphene-based QHE devices from the expected value of 4×R{sub H,2} = 2 h/e{sup 2} was smaller than the relative standard uncertainty of the measurement (<1 × 10{sup −7}) limited by the used resistance bridge.« less

  15. Giant spin Hall angle from topological insulator BixSe(1 - x) thin films

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Dc, Mahendra; Jamali, Mahdi; Chen, Junyang; Hickey, Danielle; Zhang, Delin; Zhao, Zhengyang; Li, Hongshi; Quarterman, Patrick; Lv, Yang; Mkhyon, Andre; Wang, Jian-Ping

    Investigation on the spin-orbit torque (SOT) from large spin-orbit coupling materials has been attracting interest because of its low power switching of the magnetization and ultra-fast driving of the domain wall motion that can be used in future spin based memory and logic devices. We investigated SOT from topological insulator BixSe(1 - x) thin film in BixSe(1 - x) /CoFeB heterostructure by using the dc planar Hall method, where BixSe(1 - x) thin films were prepared by a unique industry-compatible deposition process. The angle dependent Hall resistance was measured in the presence of a rotating external in-plane magnetic field at bipolar currents. The spin Hall angle (SHA) from this BixSe(1 - x) thin film was found to be as large as 22.41, which is the largest ever reported at room temperature (RT). The giant SHA and large spin Hall conductivity (SHC) make this BixSe(1 - x) thin film a very strong candidate as an SOT generator in SOT based memory and logic devices.

  16. Tunable magnetic and transport properties of Mn3Ga thin films on Ta/Ru seed layer

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Hu, Fang; Xu, Guizhou; You, Yurong; Zhang, Zhi; Xu, Zhan; Gong, Yuanyuan; Liu, Er; Zhang, Hongguo; Liu, Enke; Wang, Wenhong; Xu, Feng

    2018-03-01

    Hexagonal D019-type Mn3Z alloys that possess large anomalous and topological-like Hall effects have attracted much attention due to their great potential in antiferromagnetic spintronic devices. Herein, we report the preparation of Mn3Ga films in both tetragonal and hexagonal phases with a tuned Ta/Ru seed layer on a thermally oxidized Si substrate. Large coercivity together with large anomalous Hall resistivity is found in the Ta-only sample with a mixed tetragonal phase. By increasing the thickness of the Ru layer, the tetragonal phase gradually disappears and a relatively pure hexagonal phase is obtained in the Ta(5)/Ru(30) buffered sample. Further magnetic and transport measurements revealed that the anomalous Hall conductivity nearly vanishes in the pure hexagonal sample, while an abnormal asymmetric hump structure emerges in the low field region. The extracted additional Hall term is robust in a large temperature range and presents a sign reversal above 200 K. The abnormal Hall properties are proposed to be closely related to the frustrated spin structure of D019 Mn3Ga.

  17. Chirality-induced magnon transport in AA-stacked bilayer honeycomb chiral magnets.

    PubMed

    Owerre, S A

    2016-11-30

    In this Letter, we study the magnetic transport in AA-stacked bilayer honeycomb chiral magnets coupled either ferromagnetically or antiferromagnetically. For both couplings, we observe chirality-induced gaps, chiral protected edge states, magnon Hall and magnon spin Nernst effects of magnetic spin excitations. For ferromagnetically coupled layers, thermal Hall and spin Nernst conductivities do not change sign as function of magnetic field or temperature similar to single-layer honeycomb ferromagnetic insulator. In contrast, for antiferromagnetically coupled layers, we observe a sign change in the thermal Hall and spin Nernst conductivities as the magnetic field is reversed. We discuss possible experimental accessible honeycomb bilayer quantum materials in which these effects can be observed.

  18. Hall effect measurements of high-quality M n3CuN thin films and the electronic structure

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Matsumoto, Toshiki; Hatano, Takafumi; Urata, Takahiro; Iida, Kazumasa; Takenaka, Koshi; Ikuta, Hiroshi

    2017-11-01

    The physical properties of M n3CuN were studied using thin films. We found that an annealing process was very effective to improve the film quality, the key of which was the use of Ti that prevented the formation of oxide impurities. Using these high-quality thin films, we found strong strain dependence for the ferromagnetic transition temperature (TC) and a sign change of the Hall coefficient at TC. The analysis of Hall coefficient data revealed a sizable decrease of hole concentration and a large increase of electron mobility below TC, which is discussed in relation to the electronic structure of this material.

  19. DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Bestwick, A. J.; Fox, E. J.; Kou, Xufeng

    In this study, we report a nearly ideal quantum anomalous Hall effect in a three-dimensional topological insulator thin film with ferromagnetic doping. Near zero applied magnetic field we measure exact quantization in the Hall resistance to within a part per 10,000 and a longitudinal resistivity under 1 Ω per square, with chiral edge transport explicitly confirmed by nonlocal measurements. Deviations from this behavior are found to be caused by thermally activated carriers, as indicated by an Arrhenius law temperature dependence. Using the deviations as a thermometer, we demonstrate an unexpected magnetocaloric effect and use it to reach near-perfect quantization bymore » cooling the sample below the dilution refrigerator base temperature in a process approximating adiabatic demagnetization refrigeration.« less

  20. Single molecule magnets from magnetic building blocks

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kroener, W.; Paretzki, A.; Cervetti, C.; Hohloch, S.; Rauschenbach, S.; Kern, K.; Dressel, M.; Bogani, L.; M&üLler, P.

    2013-03-01

    We provide a basic set of magnetic building blocks that can be rationally assembled, similar to magnetic LEGO bricks, in order to create a huge variety of magnetic behavior. Using rare-earth centers and multipyridine ligands, fine-tuning of intra and intermolecular exchange interaction is demonstrated. We have investigated a series of molecules with monomeric, dimeric and trimeric lanthanide centers using SQUID susceptometry and Hall bar magnetometry. A home-made micro-Hall-probe magnetometer was used to measure magnetic hysteresis loops at mK temperatures and fields up to 17 T. All compounds show hysteresis below blocking temperatures of 3 to 4 K. The correlation of the assembly of the building blocks with the magnetic properties will be discussed.

  1. The effect of a Cr addition and transformation temperature on the mechanical properties of cold drawn hyper-eutectoid steel wires

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Song, Hyung Rak; Kang, Eui Goo; Bae, Chul Min; Lee, Choong Yeol; Lee, Duk Lak; Nam, Won Jong

    2006-06-01

    The effects of a Cr addition and transformation temperature on the strength and work hardening behavior of cold drawn hyper-eutectoid steel wires are investigated in this study. The Cr addition was found to be effective for increasing the tensile strength and work hardening rate, k/(2 λ°)1/2, due to the refinement of the initial interlamellar spacing and the increment of the Hall-Petch parameter. While the work hardening rate, k/(2 λ°)1/2, was significantly influenced by the magnitude of the interlamellar spacing, the Hall-Petch parameter, k, was not affected by the interlamellar spacing. Additionally, the refinement of the interlamellar spacing due to the low transformation temperature and the Cr addition caused an increase of the RA in drawn pearlitic steels.

  2. Enhanced inverse spin Hall contribution at high microwave power levels in La{sub 0.67}Sr{sub 0.33}MnO{sub 3}/SrRuO{sub 3} epitaxial bilayers

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Haidar, S. M., E-mail: haidar@imr.tohoku.ac.jp; Lustikova, J.; Shiomi, Y.

    2015-10-12

    We have investigated microwave power dependence of dc voltage generated upon ferromagnetic resonance in a La{sub 0.67}Sr{sub 0.33}MnO{sub 3}/SrRuO{sub 3} epitaxial bilayer film at room temperature. With increasing microwave power above ∼75 mW, the magnitude of the voltage signal decreases as the sample temperature approaches the Curie temperature of La{sub 0.67}Sr{sub 0.33}MnO{sub 3} due to heating effects. By analyzing the dependence of the voltage signal on the direction of the magnetic field, we show that with increasing microwave power the contribution from the inverse spin Hall effect becomes more dominant than that from the anisotropic magnetoresistance effect.

  3. Temperature dependence of ballistic mobility in a metamorphic InGaAs/InAlAs high electron mobility transistor

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Lee, Jongkyong; Gang, Suhyun; Jo, Yongcheol

    We have investigated the temperature dependence of ballistic mobility in a 100 nm-long InGaAs/InAlAs metamorphic high-electron-mobility transistor designed for millimeter-wavelength RF applications. To extract the temperature dependence of quasi-ballistic mobility, our experiment involves measurements of the effective mobility in the low-bias linear region of the transistor and of the collision-dominated Hall mobility using a gated Hall bar of the same epitaxial structure. The data measured from the experiment are consistent with that of modeled ballistic mobility based on ballistic transport theory. These results advance the understanding of ballistic transport in various transistors with a nano-scale channel length that is comparable tomore » the carrier's mean free path in the channel.« less

  4. Controlling the anomalous Hall effect by electric-field-induced piezo-strain in Fe40Pt60/(001)-Pb(Mg1/3Nb2/3)0.67Ti0.33O3 multiferroic heterostructures

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Yang, Yuanjun; Yao, Yingxue; Chen, Lei; Huang, Haoliang; Zhang, Benjian; Lin, Hui; Luo, Zhenlin; Gao, Chen; Lu, Y. L.; Li, Xiaoguang; Xiao, Gang; Feng, Ce; Zhao, Y. G.

    2018-01-01

    Electric-field control of the anomalous Hall effect (AHE) was investigated in Fe40Pt60/(001)-Pb(Mg1/3Nb2/3)0.67Ti0.33O3 (FePt/PMN-PT) multiferroic heterostructures at room temperature. It was observed that a very large Hall resistivity change of up to 23.9% was produced using electric fields under a magnetic field bias of 100 Oe. A pulsed electric field sequence was used to generate nonvolatile strain to manipulate the Hall resistivity. Two corresponding nonvolatile states with distinct Hall resistivities were achieved after the electric fields were removed, thus enabling the encoding of binary information for memory applications. These results demonstrate that the Hall resistivity can be reversibly switched in a nonvolatile manner using programmable electric fields. Two remanent magnetic states that were created by electric-field-induced piezo-strain from the PMN-PT were attributed to the nonvolatile and reversible properties of the AHE. This work suggests that a low-energy-consumption-based approach can be used to create nonvolatile resistance states for spintronic devices based on electric-field control of the AHE.

  5. A review of the quantum Hall effects in MgZnO/ZnO heterostructures

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Falson, Joseph; Kawasaki, Masashi

    2018-05-01

    This review visits recent experimental efforts on high mobility two-dimensional electron systems (2DES) hosted at the Mg x Zn1-x O/ZnO heterointerface. We begin with the growth of these samples, and highlight the key characteristics of ozone-assisted molecular beam epitaxy required for their production. The transport characteristics of these structures are found to rival that of traditional semiconductor material systems, as signified by the high electron mobility (μ > 1000 000 cm2 Vs‑1) and rich quantum Hall features. Owing to a large effective mass and small dielectric constant, interaction effects are an order of magnitude stronger in comparison with the well studied GaAs-based 2DES. The strong correlation physics results in robust Fermi-liquid renormalization of the effective mass and spin susceptibility of carriers, which in turn dictates the parameter space for the quantum Hall effect. Finally, we explore the quantum Hall effect with a particular emphasis on the spin degree of freedom of carriers, and how their large spin splitting allows control of the ground states encountered at ultra-low temperatures within the fractional quantum Hall regime. We discuss in detail the physics of even-denominator fractional quantum Hall states, whose observation and underlying character remain elusive and exotic.

  6. Hall-plot of the phase diagram for Ba(Fe1-xCox)2As2

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Iida, Kazumasa; Grinenko, Vadim; Kurth, Fritz; Ichinose, Ataru; Tsukada, Ichiro; Ahrens, Eike; Pukenas, Aurimas; Chekhonin, Paul; Skrotzki, Werner; Teresiak, Angelika; Hühne, Ruben; Aswartham, Saicharan; Wurmehl, Sabine; Mönch, Ingolf; Erbe, Manuela; Hänisch, Jens; Holzapfel, Bernhard; Drechsler, Stefan-Ludwig; Efremov, Dmitri V.

    2016-06-01

    The Hall effect is a powerful tool for investigating carrier type and density. For single-band materials, the Hall coefficient is traditionally expressed simply by , where e is the charge of the carrier, and n is the concentration. However, it is well known that in the critical region near a quantum phase transition, as it was demonstrated for cuprates and heavy fermions, the Hall coefficient exhibits strong temperature and doping dependencies, which can not be described by such a simple expression, and the interpretation of the Hall coefficient for Fe-based superconductors is also problematic. Here, we investigate thin films of Ba(Fe1-xCox)2As2 with compressive and tensile in-plane strain in a wide range of Co doping. Such in-plane strain changes the band structure of the compounds, resulting in various shifts of the whole phase diagram as a function of Co doping. We show that the resultant phase diagrams for different strain states can be mapped onto a single phase diagram with the Hall number. This universal plot is attributed to the critical fluctuations in multiband systems near the antiferromagnetic transition, which may suggest a direct link between magnetic and superconducting properties in the BaFe2As2 system.

  7. Aperture size, materiality of the secondary room, and listener location: Impact on the simulated impulse response of a coupled-volume concert hall

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ermann, Michael; Johnson, Marty E.; Harrison, Byron W.

    2002-11-01

    By adding a second room to a concert hall, and designing doors to control the sonic transparency between the two rooms, designers can create a new, coupled acoustic. Concert halls use coupling to achieve a variable, longer, and distinct reverberant quality for their musicians and listeners. For this study, a coupled-volume concert hall based on an existing performing arts center is conceived and computer modeled. It has a fixed geometric volume, form, and primary-room sound absorption. Ray-tracing software simulates impulse responses, varying both aperture size and secondary-room sound-absorption level, across a grid of receiver (listener) locations. The results are compared with statistical analysis that suggests a highly sensitive relationship between the double-sloped condition and the architecture of the space. This line of study aims to quantitatively and spatially correlate the double-sloped condition with (1) aperture size exposing the chamber, (2) sound absorptance in the coupled volume, and (3) listener location.

  8. Aperture size, materiality of the secondary room and listener location: Impact on the simulated impulse response of a coupled-volume concert hall

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ermann, Michael; Johnson, Marty E.; Harrison, Byron W.

    2003-04-01

    By adding a second room to a concert hall, and designing doors to control the sonic transparency between the two rooms, designers can create a new, coupled acoustic. Concert halls use coupling to achieve a variable, longer and distinct reverberant quality for their musicians and listeners. For this study, a coupled-volume concert hall based on an existing performing arts center is conceived and computer-modeled. It has a fixed geometric volume, form and primary-room sound absorption. Ray-tracing software simulates impulse responses, varying both aperture size and secondary-room sound absorption level, across a grid of receiver (listener) locations. The results are compared with statistical analysis that suggests a highly sensitive relationship between the double-sloped condition and the architecture of the space. This line of study aims to quantitatively and spatially correlate the double-sloped condition with (1) aperture size exposing the chamber, (2) sound absorptance in the coupled volume, and (3) listener location.

  9. Large thermal Hall effect in a frustrated pyrochlore magnet

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Hirschberger, Max; Krizan, Jason; Cava, Robert J.; Ong, N. Phuan

    2015-03-01

    In frustrated magnetism, the nature of the ground state and its elementary excitations are a matter of considerable debate. We present a detailed study of the full thermal conductivity tensor κij, including the Righi-Leduc (or thermal Hall) effect, in single crystals of the frustrated quantum spin-ice pyrochlore Tb2Ti2O7. The off-diagonal response κxy / T is large in this insulating material, despite the absence of itinerant electrons experiencing the Lorentz force. Our experiments over the temperature range of 0 . 8 - 200 K and in fields up to 14 T reveal a remarkable phenomenology: A sizeable field-linear Hall effect κxy / T is observed below 100 K, and its slope with respect to magnetic field increases strongly as we cool the sample. We observe significant curvature in the field dependence of κxy / T below 15 K. At the lowest temperatures, both κxx / T and the initial slope limB-->0 [κxy / TB ] are constant in temperature, behavior reminiscent of fermionic heat conduction in dirty metals. Experimental methods and verification of the intrinsic nature of the effect will be discussed. R.J.C. and N.P.O. are supported by a MURI Grant (ARO W911NF-12-1-0461) and by the US National Science Foundation (Grant Number DMR 0819860).

  10. Plasma Potential and Langmuir Probe Measurements in the Near-field Plume of the NASA 300M Hall Thruster

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Herman, Daniel A; Shastry, Rohit; Huang, Wensheng; Soulas, George C.; KamHawi, Hani

    2012-01-01

    In order to aid in the design of high-power Hall thrusters and provide experimental validation for existing modeling efforts, plasma potential and Langmuir probe measurements were performed in the near-field plume of the NASA 300M Hall thruster. A probe array consisting of a Faraday probe, Langmuir probe, and emissive probe was used to interrogate the plume from approximately 0.1 - 2.0 DT,m downstream of the thruster exit plane at four operating conditions: 300 V, 400 V, and 500 V at 20 kW as well as 300 V at 10 kW. Results show that the acceleration zone and high-temperature region were contained within 0.3 DT,m from the exit plane at all operating conditions. Isothermal lines were shown to strongly follow magnetic field lines in the nearfield, with maximum temperatures ranging from 19 - 27 eV. The electron temperature spatial distribution created large drops in measured floating potentials in front of the magnetic pole surfaces where the plasma density was small, which suggests strong sheaths at these surfaces. The data taken have provided valuable information for future design and modeling validation, and complements ongoing internal measurement efforts on the NASA 300 M.

  11. Zero-resistance states induced by electromagnetic-wave excitation in GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructures.

    PubMed

    Mani, Ramesh G; Smet, Jürgen H; von Klitzing, Klaus; Narayanamurti, Venkatesh; Johnson, William B; Umansky, Vladimir

    2002-12-12

    The observation of vanishing electrical resistance in condensed matter has led to the discovery of new phenomena such as, for example, superconductivity, where a zero-resistance state can be detected in a metal below a transition temperature T(c) (ref. 1). More recently, quantum Hall effects were discovered from investigations of zero-resistance states at low temperatures and high magnetic fields in two-dimensional electron systems (2DESs). In quantum Hall systems and superconductors, zero-resistance states often coincide with the appearance of a gap in the energy spectrum. Here we report the observation of zero-resistance states and energy gaps in a surprising setting: ultrahigh-mobility GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructures that contain a 2DES exhibit vanishing diagonal resistance without Hall resistance quantization at low temperatures and low magnetic fields when the specimen is subjected to electromagnetic wave excitation. Zero-resistance-states occur about magnetic fields B = 4/5 Bf and B = 4/9 Bf, where Bf = 2pifm*/e,m* is the electron mass, e is the electron charge, and f is the electromagnetic-wave frequency. Activated transport measurements on the resistance minima also indicate an energy gap at the Fermi level. The results suggest an unexpected radiation-induced, electronic-state-transition in the GaAs/AlGaAs 2DES.

  12. Effects of growth temperatures on the physical properties of Cu2ZnSnS4 thin films deposited through spray pyrolysis for solar cell applications

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Fadavieslam, M. R.; Keshavarz, S.

    2018-02-01

    This paper reports the effects of substrate temperature on the structural, optical, and electrical properties of Cu2ZnSnS4 (CZTS) thin films deposited on soda lime glass through spray pyrolysis without sulfurization. Substrate temperatures ranged from 250 to 500 °C at a step of 50 °C, and a precursor solution was prepared by dissolving copper chloride, zinc acetate, zinc chloride, and thiourea in ethanol and di-ionized water. The films were characterized through X-ray diffraction (XRD), field emission scanning electron microscopy, ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy, and electrical resistance and Hall effect measurements, respectively, obtained by two-point probe and van der Pauw techniques. XRD revealed the formation of polycrystalline CZTS thin films and the appearance of relatively intense and sharp diffraction peaks at (112), (200), (220), and (312) of a kesterite phase with (112) preferential orientation, in which the crystalline degree increased as substrate temperature increased. Surface morphological analysis demonstrated the formation of a smooth, compact, and uniform CZTS surface. When substrate temperature increased from 250 to 500 °C, single-crystal grains increased from 6.38 to 28 nm, carrier concentration increased from 3.4 × 1017 to 2.36 × 1019 cm-3, Hall mobility increased from 30.96 to 68.52 cm2/V.S, optical band gap decreased from 1.74 to 1.14 eV, and resistivity decreased from 0.59 to 3.87 × 10-3 Ωcm. Hall effect analysis indicated that the films exhibited p-type conductivity.

  13. Effect of segmented electrode length on the performances of Hall thruster

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Duan, Ping; Chen, Long; Liu, Guangrui; Bian, Xingyu; Yin, Yan

    2016-09-01

    The influences of the low-emissive graphite segmented electrode placed near the channel exit on the discharge characteristics of Hall thruster are studied using the particle-in-cell method. A two-dimensional physical model is established according to the Hall thruster discharge channel configuration. The effects of electrode length on potential, ion density, electron temperature, ionization rate and discharge current are investigated. It is found that, with the increasing of segmented electrode length, the equipotential lines bend towards the channel exit, and approximately parallel to the wall at the channel surface, radial velocity and radial flow of ions are increased, and the electron temperature is also enhanced. Due to the conductive characteristic of electrodes, the radial electric field and the axial electron conductivity near the wall are enhanced, and the probability of the electron-atom ionization is reduced, which leads to the degradation of ionization rate in discharge channel. However, the interaction between electrons and the wall enhances the near wall conductivity, therefore the discharge current grows along with the segmented electrode length, and the performance of the thruster is also affected.

  14. Magnetic phase dependence of the anomalous Hall effect in Mn 3Sn single crystals

    DOE PAGES

    Sung, Nakheon H.; Ronning, Filip; Thompson, Joe David; ...

    2018-03-29

    Thermodynamic and transport properties are reported on single crystals of the hexagonal antiferromagnet Mn 3Sn grown by the Sn flux technique. Magnetization measurements reveal two magnetic phase transitions at T 1 = 275 K and T 2 = 200 K, below the antiferromagnetic phase transition at T N ≈ 420 K. The Hall conductivity in zero magnetic field is suppressed dramatically from 4.7 Ω -1 cm -1 to near zero below T 1, coincident with the vanishing of the weak ferromagnetic moment. Finally, this illustrates that the large anomalous Hall effect arising from the Berry curvature can be switched onmore » and off by a subtle change in the symmetry of the magnetic structure near room temperature.« less

  15. Magnetic phase dependence of the anomalous Hall effect in Mn 3Sn single crystals

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Sung, Nakheon H.; Ronning, Filip; Thompson, Joe David

    Thermodynamic and transport properties are reported on single crystals of the hexagonal antiferromagnet Mn 3Sn grown by the Sn flux technique. Magnetization measurements reveal two magnetic phase transitions at T 1 = 275 K and T 2 = 200 K, below the antiferromagnetic phase transition at T N ≈ 420 K. The Hall conductivity in zero magnetic field is suppressed dramatically from 4.7 Ω -1 cm -1 to near zero below T 1, coincident with the vanishing of the weak ferromagnetic moment. Finally, this illustrates that the large anomalous Hall effect arising from the Berry curvature can be switched onmore » and off by a subtle change in the symmetry of the magnetic structure near room temperature.« less

  16. Valley Hall effect and Nernst effect in strain engineered graphene

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Niu, Zhi Ping; Yao, Jian-ming

    2018-04-01

    We theoretically predict the existence of tunneling valley Hall effect and Nernst effect in the normal/strain/normal graphene junctions, where a strained graphene is sandwiched by two normal graphene electrodes. By applying an electric bias a pure transverse valley Hall current with longitudinal charge current is generated. If the system is driven by a temperature bias, a valley Nernst effect is observed, where a pure transverse valley current without charge current propagates. Furthermore, the transverse valley current can be modulated by the Fermi energy and crystallographic orientation. When the magnetic field is further considered, we obtain a fully valley-polarized current. It is expected these features may be helpful in the design of the controllable valleytronic devices.

  17. A milliKelvin scanning Hall probe microscope for high resolution magnetic imaging

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Khotkevych, V. V.; Bending, S. J.

    2009-02-01

    The design and performance of a novel scanning Hall probe microscope for milliKelvin magnetic imaging with submicron lateral resolution is presented. The microscope head is housed in the vacuum chamber of a commercial 3He-refrigerator and operates between room temperature and 300 mK in magnetic fields up to 10 T. Mapping of the local magnetic induction at the sample surface is performed by a micro-fabricated 2DEG Hall probe equipped with an integrated STM tip. The latter provides a reliable mechanism of surface tracking by sensing and controlling the tunnel currents. We discuss the results of tests of the system and illustrate its potential with images of suitable reference samples captured in different modes of operation.

  18. Magnetic phase dependence of the anomalous Hall effect in Mn3Sn single crystals

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Sung, N. H.; Ronning, F.; Thompson, J. D.; Bauer, E. D.

    2018-03-01

    Thermodynamic and transport properties are reported on single crystals of the hexagonal antiferromagnet Mn3Sn grown by the Sn flux technique. Magnetization measurements reveal two magnetic phase transitions at T1 = 275 K and T2 = 200 K, below the antiferromagnetic phase transition at TN ≈ 420 K. The Hall conductivity in zero magnetic field is suppressed dramatically from 4.7 Ω-1 cm-1 to near zero below T1, coincident with the vanishing of the weak ferromagnetic moment. This illustrates that the large anomalous Hall effect arising from the Berry curvature can be switched on and off by a subtle change in the symmetry of the magnetic structure near room temperature.

  19. Frictional Magneto-Coulomb Drag in Graphene Double-Layer Heterostructures.

    PubMed

    Liu, Xiaomeng; Wang, Lei; Fong, Kin Chung; Gao, Yuanda; Maher, Patrick; Watanabe, Kenji; Taniguchi, Takashi; Hone, James; Dean, Cory; Kim, Philip

    2017-08-04

    Coulomb interaction between two closely spaced parallel layers of conductors can generate the frictional drag effect by interlayer Coulomb scattering. Employing graphene double layers separated by few-layer hexagonal boron nitride, we investigate density tunable magneto- and Hall drag under strong magnetic fields. The observed large magnetodrag and Hall-drag signals can be related with Laudau level filling status of the drive and drag layers. We find that the sign and magnitude of the drag resistivity tensor can be quantitatively correlated to the variation of magnetoresistivity tensors in the drive and drag layers, confirming a theoretical formula for magnetodrag in the quantum Hall regime. The observed weak temperature dependence and ∼B^{2} dependence of the magnetodrag are qualitatively explained by Coulomb scattering phase-space argument.

  20. Iodine Hall Thruster Propellant Feed System for a CubeSat

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Polzin, Kurt A.; Peeples, Steven

    2014-01-01

    The components required for an in-space iodine vapor-fed Hall effect thruster propellant management system are described. A laboratory apparatus was assembled and used to produce iodine vapor and control the flow through the application of heating to the propellant reservoir and through the adjustment of the opening in a proportional flow control valve. Changing of the reservoir temperature altered the flowrate on the timescale of minutes while adjustment of the proportional flow control valve changed the flowrate immediately without an overshoot or undershoot in flowrate with the requisite recovery time associated with thermal control systems. The flowrates tested spanned a range from 0-1.5 mg/s of iodine, which is sufficient to feed a 200-W Hall effect thruster.

  1. Electrical transport and optical band gap of NiFe2Ox thin films

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Bougiatioti, Panagiota; Manos, Orestis; Klewe, Christoph; Meier, Daniel; Teichert, Niclas; Schmalhorst, Jan-Michael; Kuschel, Timo; Reiss, Günter

    2017-12-01

    We fabricated NiFe2Ox thin films on MgAl2O4(001) by reactive dc magnetron co-sputtering varying the oxygen partial pressure. The fabrication of a material with a variable oxygen deficiency leads to controllable electrical and optical properties which are beneficial for the investigations of the transport phenomena and could, therefore, promote the use of such materials in spintronic and spin caloritronic applications. We used several characterization techniques to investigate the film properties, focusing on their structural, magnetic, electrical, and optical properties. From the electrical resistivity, we obtained the conduction mechanisms that govern the systems in the high and low temperature regimes. We further extracted low thermal activation energies which unveil extrinsic transport mechanisms. The thermal activation energy decreases in the less oxidized samples revealing the pronounced contribution of a large amount of electronic states localized in the band gap to the electrical conductivity. The Hall coefficient is negative and decreases with increasing conductivity as expected for n-type conduction, while the Hall- and the drift mobilities show a large difference. The optical band gaps were determined via ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy. They follow a similar trend as the thermal activation energies, with lower band gap values in the less oxidized samples.

  2. Development of a 13 kW Hall Thruster Propulsion System Performance Model for AEPS

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Stanley, Steven; Allen, May; Goodfellow, Keith; Chew, Gilbert; Rapetti, Ryan; Tofil, Todd; Herman, Dan; Jackson, Jerry; Myers, Roger

    2017-01-01

    The Advanced Electric Propulsion System (AEPS) program will develop a flight 13kW Hall thruster propulsion system based on NASA's HERMeS thruster. The AEPS system includes the Hall Thruster, the Power Processing Unit (PPU) and the Xenon Flow Controller (XFC). These three primary components must operate together to ensure that the system generates the required combinations of thrust and specific impulse at the required system efficiencies for the desired system lifetime. At the highest level, the AEPS system will be integrated into the spacecraft and will receive power, propellant, and commands from the spacecraft. Power and propellant flow rates will be determined by the throttle set points commanded by the spacecraft. Within the system, the major control loop is between the mass flow rate and thruster current, with time-dependencies required to handle all expected transients, and additional, much slower interactions between the thruster and cathode temperatures, flow controller and PPU. The internal system interactions generally occur on shorter timescales than the spacecraft interactions, though certain failure modes may require rapid responses from the spacecraft. The AEPS system performance model is designed to account for all these interactions in a way that allows evaluation of the sensitivity of the system to expected changes over the planned mission as well as to assess the impacts of normal component and assembly variability during the production phase of the program. This effort describes the plan for the system performance model development, correlation to NASA test data, and how the model will be used to evaluate the critical internal and external interactions. The results will ensure the component requirements do not unnecessarily drive the system cost or overly constrain the development program. Finally, the model will be available to quickly troubleshoot any future unforeseen development challenges.

  3. Crystal Growth and Characterization of CdTe Grown by Vertical Gradient Freeze

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Su, Ching-Hua; Lehoczky, S. L.; Raghothamachar, B.; Dudley, M.

    2007-01-01

    In this study, crystals of CdTe were grown from melts by the unseeded vertical gradient freeze method. The quality of grown crystal were studied by various characterization techniques including Synchrotron White Beam X-ray Topography (SWBXT), chemical analysis by glow discharge mass spectroscopy (GDMS), low temperature photoluminescence (PL), and Hall measurements. The SWBXT images from various angles show nearly strain-free grains, grains with inhomogeneous strains, as well as twinning nucleated in the shoulder region of the boule. The GDMS chemical analysis shows the contamination of Ga at a level of 3900 ppb, atomic. The low temperature PL measurement exhibits the characteristic emissions of a Ga-doped sample. The Hall measurements show a resistivity of 1 x l0(exp 7) ohm-cm at room temperature to 3 x 10(exp 9) ohm-cm at 78K with the respective hole and electron concentration of 1.7 x 10(exp 9) cm(exp -3) and 3.9 x 10(exp 7) cm(exp -3) at room temperature.

  4. Investigation on thermal environment improvement by waste heat recovery in the underground station in Qingdao metro

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Liu, Jianwei; Liu, Jiaquan; Wang, Fengyin; Wang, Cuiping

    2018-03-01

    The thermal environment parameters, like the temperature and air velocity, are measured to investigate the heat comfort status of metro staff working area in winter in Qingdao. The temperature is affected obviously by the piston wind from the train and waiting hall in the lower Hall, and the temperature is not satisfied with the least heat comfort temperature of 16 °C. At the same time, the heat produced by the electrical and control equipments is brought by the cooling air to atmosphere for the equipment safety. Utilizing the water-circulating heat pump, it is feasible to transfer the emission heat to the staff working area to improve the thermal environment. Analyzed the feasibility from the technique and economy when using the heat pump, the water-circulating heat pump could be the best way to realize the waste heat recovery and to help the heat comfort of staff working area in winter in the underground metro station in north China.

  5. Linear magneto-resistance in Bi{sub 2}SeTe{sub 2} topological insulator

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Amaladass, E. P., E-mail: edward@igcar.gov.in; Sharma, Shilpam; Devidas, T. R.

    2016-05-23

    Magnetic field and temperature dependent electronic transport measurements have been carried out on Bi{sub 2}SeTe{sub 2} topological insulator single crystals. The measurements reveal an insulating behavior and the carriers were found to be electrons (n-type) from Hall measurement. Magneto-resistance (MR) measurements in the field range (B) of 15 T to -15 T carried out at 4.2 K showed a cusp like weak anti-localization behavior for lower fields (-5 T 5 T. Upon increasing temperature, MR transforms to linear dependence of B at 40, 50 and 100 K. On further increasing temperatures (> 200 K), a parabolic MR is observed. Temperaturemore » dependent Hall data also showed a transition from a nonlinear to linear behavior upon increasing temperatures. Disorder induced changes in the electronic transport characteristics of bulk and surface electrons are believed to cause such changes in the magneto-transport behavior of this system.« less

  6. Characterization of winter airborne particles at Emperor Qin's Terra-cotta Museum, China.

    PubMed

    Hu, Tafeng; Lee, Shuncheng; Cao, Junji; Chow, Judith C; Watson, John G; Ho, Kinfai; Ho, Wingkei; Rong, Bo; An, Zhisheng

    2009-10-01

    Daytime and nighttime total suspended particulate matters (TSP) were collected inside and outside Emperor Qin's Terra-cotta Museum, the most popular on-site museum in China, in winter 2008. The purpose of this study was to investigate the contribution of visitors to indoor airborne particles in two display halls with different architectural and ventilating conditions, including Exhibition Hall and Pit No.1. Morphological and elemental analyses of 7-day individual particle samples were performed with scanning electron microscopy and energy dispersive X-ray spectrometer (SEM-EDX). Particle mass concentrations in Exhibition Hall and Pit No.1 were in a range of 54.7-291.7 microg m(-3) and 95.3-285.4 microg m(-3) with maximum diameters of 17.5 microm and 26.0 microm, respectively. In most sampling days, daytime/nighttime particle mass ratios in Exhibition Hall (1.30-3.12) were higher than those in Pit No.1 (0.96-2.59), indicating more contribution of the tourist flow in Exhibition Hall than in Pit No. 1. The maximum of particle size distributions were in a range of 0.5-1.0 microm, with the highest abundance (43.4%) occurred in Exhibition Hall at night. The majority of airborne particles at the Museum was composed of soil dust, S-containing particles, and low-Z particles like soot aggregate and biogenic particles. Both size distributions and particle types were found to be associated with visitor numbers in Exhibition Hall and with natural ventilation in Pit No.1. No significant influence of visitors on indoor temperature and relative humidity (RH) was found in either display halls. Those baseline data on the nature of the airborne particles inside the Museum can be incorporated into the maintenance criteria, display management, and ventilation strategy by conservators of the museum.

  7. Helical magnetic structure and the anomalous and topological Hall effects in epitaxial B20 Fe1 -yCoyGe films

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Spencer, Charles S.; Gayles, Jacob; Porter, Nicholas A.; Sugimoto, Satoshi; Aslam, Zabeada; Kinane, Christian J.; Charlton, Timothy R.; Freimuth, Frank; Chadov, Stanislav; Langridge, Sean; Sinova, Jairo; Felser, Claudia; Blügel, Stefan; Mokrousov, Yuriy; Marrows, Christopher H.

    2018-06-01

    Epitaxial films of the B20-structure compound Fe1 -yCoyGe were grown by molecular beam epitaxy on Si (111) substrates. The magnetization varied smoothly from the bulklike values of one Bohr magneton per Fe atom for FeGe to zero for nonmagnetic CoGe. The chiral lattice structure leads to a Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI), and the films' helical magnetic ground state was confirmed using polarized neutron reflectometry measurements. The pitch of the spin helix, measured by this method, varies with Co content y and diverges at y ˜0.45 . This indicates a zero crossing of the DMI, which we reproduced in calculations using first-principles methods. We also measured the longitudinal and Hall resistivity of our films as a function of magnetic field, temperature, and Co content y . The Hall resistivity is expected to contain contributions from the ordinary, anomalous, and topological Hall effects. Both the anomalous and topological Hall resistivities show peaks around y ˜0.5 . Our first-principles calculations show a peak in the topological Hall constant at this value of y , related to the strong spin polarization predicted for intermediate values of y . Our calculations predict half-metallicity for y =0.6 , consistent with the experimentally observed linear magnetoresistance at this composition, and potentially related to the other unusual transport properties for intermediate value of y . While it is possible to reconcile theory with experiment for the various Hall effects for FeGe, the large topological Hall resistivities for y ˜0.5 are much larger than expected when the very small emergent fields associated with the divergence in the DMI are taken into account.

  8. Strain modulation-enhanced Mg acceptor activation efficiency of Al0.14Ga0.86N/GaN superlattices with AlN interlayer

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Wang, Lei; Li, Rui; Li, Ding; Liu, Ningyang; Liu, Lei; Chen, Weihua; Wang, Cunda; Yang, Zhijian; Hu, Xiaodong

    2010-02-01

    AlN layer was grown as interlayer between undoped GaN and Mg doped Al0.14Ga0.86N/GaN superlattices (SLs) epilayer to modulate the strain distribution between Al0.14Ga0.86N barrier and GaN well layers in SLs sample. Strain relaxation was observed in the SLs sample with AlN interlayer by x-ray diffraction reciprocal space mapping method. The measured hole concentration of SLs sample with AlN interlayer at room temperature was over 1.6×1018 cm-3 but that was only 6.6×1016 cm-3 obtained in SLs sample without AlN interlayer. Variable temperature Hall-effect measurement showed that the acceptor activation energy decreased from 150 to 70 meV after inserting the AlN layer, which indicated that the strain modulation of SLs induced by AlN interlayer was beneficial to the Mg acceptor activation and hole concentration enhancement.

  9. Spin precession and spin Hall effect in monolayer graphene/Pt nanostructures

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Savero Torres, W.; Sierra, J. F.; Benítez, L. A.; Bonell, F.; Costache, M. V.; Valenzuela, S. O.

    2017-12-01

    Spin Hall effects have surged as promising phenomena for spin logics operations without ferromagnets. However, the magnitude of the detected electric signals at room temperature in metallic systems has been so far underwhelming. Here, we demonstrate a two-order of magnitude enhancement of the signal in monolayer graphene/Pt devices when compared to their fully metallic counterparts. The enhancement stems in part from efficient spin injection and the large spin resistance of graphene but we also observe 100% spin absorption in Pt and find an unusually large effective spin Hall angle of up to 0.15. The large spin-to-charge conversion allows us to characterise spin precession in graphene under the presence of a magnetic field. Furthermore, by developing an analytical model based on the 1D diffusive spin-transport, we demonstrate that the effective spin-relaxation time in graphene can be accurately determined using the (inverse) spin Hall effect as a means of detection. This is a necessary step to gather full understanding of the consequences of spin absorption in spin Hall devices, which is known to suppress effective spin lifetimes in both metallic and graphene systems.

  10. Seasonal variation of the underground cosmic muon flux observed at Daya Bay

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    An, F. P.; Balantekin, A. B.; Band, H. R.; Bishai, M.; Blyth, S.; Cao, D.; Cao, G. F.; Cao, J.; Chan, Y. L.; Chang, J. F.; Chang, Y.; Chen, H. S.; Chen, Q. Y.; Chen, S. M.; Chen, Y. X.; Chen, Y.; Cheng, J.; Cheng, Z. K.; Cherwinka, J. J.; Chu, M. C.; Chukanov, A.; Cummings, J. P.; Ding, Y. Y.; Diwan, M. V.; Dolgareva, M.; Dove, J.; Dwyer, D. A.; Edwards, W. R.; Gill, R.; Gonchar, M.; Gong, G. H.; Gong, H.; Grassi, M.; Gu, W. Q.; Guo, L.; Guo, X. H.; Guo, Y. H.; Guo, Z.; Hackenburg, R. W.; Hans, S.; He, M.; Heeger, K. M.; Heng, Y. K.; Higuera, A.; Hsiung, Y. B.; Hu, B. Z.; Hu, T.; Huang, E. C.; Huang, H. X.; Huang, X. T.; Huber, P.; Huo, W.; Hussain, G.; Jaffe, D. E.; Jen, K. L.; Jetter, S.; Ji, X. P.; Ji, X. L.; Jiao, J. B.; Johnson, R. A.; Jones, D.; Kang, L.; Kettell, S. H.; Khan, A.; Kohn, S.; Kramer, M.; Kwan, K. K.; Kwok, M. W.; Kwok, T.; Langford, T. J.; Lau, K.; Lebanowski, L.; Lee, J.; Lee, J. H. C.; Lei, R. T.; Leitner, R.; Li, C.; Li, D. J.; Li, F.; Li, G. S.; Li, Q. J.; Li, S.; Li, S. C.; Li, W. D.; Li, X. N.; Li, X. Q.; Li, Y. F.; Li, Z. B.; Liang, H.; Lin, C. J.; Lin, G. L.; Lin, S.; Lin, S. K.; Lin, Y.-C.; Ling, J. J.; Link, J. M.; Littenberg, L.; Littlejohn, B. R.; Liu, J. L.; Liu, J. C.; Loh, C. W.; Lu, C.; Lu, H. Q.; Lu, J. S.; Luk, K. B.; Ma, X. Y.; Ma, X. B.; Ma, Y. Q.; Malyshkin, Y.; Martinez Caicedo, D. A.; McDonald, K. T.; McKeown, R. D.; Mitchell, I.; Nakajima, Y.; Napolitano, J.; Naumov, D.; Naumova, E.; Ngai, H. Y.; Ochoa-Ricoux, J. P.; Olshevskiy, A.; Pan, H.-R.; Park, J.; Patton, S.; Pec, V.; Peng, J. C.; Pinsky, L.; Pun, C. S. J.; Qi, F. Z.; Qi, M.; Qian, X.; Qiu, R. M.; Raper, N.; Ren, J.; Rosero, R.; Roskovec, B.; Ruan, X. C.; Sebastiani, C.; Steiner, H.; Sun, J. L.; Tang, W.; Taychenachev, D.; Treskov, K.; Tsang, K. V.; Tull, C. E.; Viaux, N.; Viren, B.; Vorobel, V.; Wang, C. H.; Wang, M.; Wang, N. Y.; Wang, R. G.; Wang, W.; Wang, X.; Wang, Y. F.; Wang, Z.; Wang, Z.; Wang, Z. M.; Wei, H. Y.; Wen, L. J.; Whisnant, K.; White, C. G.; Whitehead, L.; Wise, T.; Wong, H. L. H.; Wong, S. C. F.; Worcester, E.; Wu, C.-H.; Wu, Q.; Wu, W. J.; Xia, D. M.; Xia, J. K.; Xing, Z. Z.; Xu, J. L.; Xu, Y.; Xue, T.; Yang, C. G.; Yang, H.; Yang, L.; Yang, M. S.; Yang, M. T.; Yang, Y. Z.; Ye, M.; Ye, Z.; Yeh, M.; Young, B. L.; Yu, Z. Y.; Zeng, S.; Zhan, L.; Zhang, C.; Zhang, C. C.; Zhang, H. H.; Zhang, J. W.; Zhang, Q. M.; Zhang, X. T.; Zhang, Y. M.; Zhang, Y. X.; Zhang, Y. M.; Zhang, Z. J.; Zhang, Z. Y.; Zhang, Z. P.; Zhao, J.; Zhou, L.; Zhuang, H. L.; Zou, J. H.

    2018-01-01

    The Daya Bay Experiment consists of eight identically designed detectors located in three underground experimental halls named as EH1, EH2, EH3, with 250, 265 and 860 meters of water equivalent vertical overburden, respectively. Cosmic muon events have been recorded over a two-year period. The underground muon rate is observed to be positively correlated with the effective atmospheric temperature and to follow a seasonal modulation pattern. The correlation coefficient α, describing how a variation in the muon rate relates to a variation in the effective atmospheric temperature, is found to be αEH1 = 0.362±0.031, αEH2 = 0.433±0.038 and αEH3 = 0.641±0.057 for each experimental hall.

  11. Unified Hall-Petch description of nano-grain nickel hardness, flow stress and strain rate sensitivity measurements

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Armstrong, R. W.; Balasubramanian, N.

    2017-08-01

    It is shown that: (i) nano-grain nickel flow stress and hardness data at ambient temperature follow a Hall-Petch (H-P) relation over a wide range of grain size; and (ii) accompanying flow stress and strain rate sensitivity measurements follow an analogous H-P relationship for the reciprocal "activation volume", (1/v*) = (1/A*b) where A* is activation area. Higher temperature flow stress measurements show a greater than expected reduction both in the H-P kɛ and in v*. The results are connected with smaller nano-grain size (< ˜20 nm) measurements exhibiting grain size weakening behavior that extends to larger grain size when tested at very low imposed strain rates.

  12. Magnetotransport of indium antimonide doped with manganese

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kuzmina, K.; Aronzon, B. A.; Kochura, A. V.; Lashkul, A. V.; Lisunov, K. G.; Lähderanta, E.; Shakhov, M. A.

    2014-07-01

    Magnetotransport, including the magnetoresistance (MR) and the Hall effect, isinvestigated in polycrystalline In1-xMnxSb samples with x = 0.02 - 0.06, containing nanosize MnSb precipitates. The relative MR, Δρ/ρ, is positive within the whole range of B= 0 - 10 T and T ~ 20 - 300 K. The Hall resistivity, ρH, exhibits a nonlinear dependence on B up to the room temperature.MR is interpreted with the two-band model, suggesting two types of holes with different concentration and mobility. In addition, analysis of ρH (B, T) is performed by taking into account both the normal and the anomalous contributions. The latter is attributable to the effect of MnSb nanoprecipitates, having the ferromagnetic Curie temperature well above 300 K.

  13. Nanoscale Nitrogen Doping in Silicon by Self-Assembled Monolayers

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Guan, Bin; Siampour, Hamidreza; Fan, Zhao; Wang, Shun; Kong, Xiang Yang; Mesli, Abdelmadjid; Zhang, Jian; Dan, Yaping

    2015-07-01

    This Report presents a nitrogen-doping method by chemically forming self-assembled monolayers on silicon. Van der Pauw technique, secondary-ion mass spectroscopy and low temperature Hall effect measurements are employed to characterize the nitrogen dopants. The experimental data show that the diffusion coefficient of nitrogen dopants is 3.66 × 10-15 cm2 s-1, 2 orders magnitude lower than that of phosphorus dopants in silicon. It is found that less than 1% of nitrogen dopants exhibit electrical activity. The analysis of Hall effect data at low temperatures indicates that the donor energy level for nitrogen dopants is located at 189 meV below the conduction band, consistent with the literature value.

  14. Beyond the Fermi liquid paradigm: Hidden Fermi liquids

    PubMed Central

    Jain, J. K.; Anderson, P. W.

    2009-01-01

    An intense investigation of possible non-Fermi liquid states of matter has been inspired by two of the most intriguing phenomena discovered in the past quarter century, namely, high-temperature superconductivity and the fractional quantum Hall effect. Despite enormous conceptual strides, these two fields have developed largely along separate paths. Two widely employed theories are the resonating valence bond theory for high-temperature superconductivity and the composite fermion theory for the fractional quantum Hall effect. The goal of this perspective article is to note that they subscribe to a common underlying paradigm: They both connect these exotic quantum liquids to certain ordinary Fermi liquids residing in unphysical Hilbert spaces. Such a relation yields numerous nontrivial experimental consequences, exposing these theories to rigorous and definitive tests. PMID:19506260

  15. Mission and System Advantages of Iodine Hall Thrusters

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Dankanich, John W.; Szabo, James; Pote, Bruce; Oleson, Steve; Kamhawi, Hani

    2014-01-01

    The exploration of alternative propellants for Hall thrusters continues to be of interest to the community. Investments have been made and continue for the maturation of iodine based Hall thrusters. Iodine testing has shown comparable performance to xenon. However, iodine has a higher storage density and resulting higher ?V capability for volume constrained systems. Iodine's vapor pressure is low enough to permit low-pressure storage, but high enough to minimize potential adverse spacecraft-thruster interactions. The low vapor pressure also means that iodine does not condense inside the thruster at ordinary operating temperatures. Iodine is safe, it stores at sub-atmospheric pressure, and can be stored unregulated for years on end; whether on the ground or on orbit. Iodine fills a niche for both low power (<1kW) and high power (>10kW) electric propulsion regimes. A range of missions have been evaluated for direct comparison of Iodine and Xenon options. The results show advantages of iodine Hall systems for both small and microsatellite application and for very large exploration class missions.

  16. Magnetic mirror effect in a cylindrical Hall thruster

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Jiang, Yiwei; Tang, Haibin; Ren, Junxue; Li, Min; Cao, Jinbin

    2018-01-01

    For cylindrical Hall thrusters, the magnetic field geometry is totally different from that in conventional Hall thrusters. In this study, we investigate the magnetic mirror effect in a fully cylindrical Hall thruster by changing the number of iron rings (0-5), which surround the discharge channel wall. The plasma properties inside the discharge channel and plume area are simulated with a self-developed PIC-MCC code. The numerical results show significant influence of magnetic geometry on the electron confinement. With the number of rings increasing above three, the near-wall electron density gap is reduced, indicating the suppression of neutral gas leakage. The electron temperature inside the discharge channel reaches its peak (38.4 eV) when the magnetic mirror is strongest. It is also found that the thruster performance has strong relations with the magnetic mirror as the propellant utilisation efficiency reaches the maximum (1.18) at the biggest magnetic mirror ratio. Also, the optimal magnetic mirror improves the multi-charged ion dynamics, including the ion production and propellant utilisation efficiency.

  17. Development of scanning graphene Hall probes for magnetic microscopy

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Schaefer, Brian T.; Wang, Lei; McEuen, Paul L.; Nowack, Katja C.

    We discuss our progress on developing scanning Hall probes fabricated from hexagonal boron nitride (hBN)-encapsulated graphene, with the goal to image magnetic fields with submicron resolution. In contrast to scanning superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) microscopy, this technique is compatible with a large applied magnetic field and not limited to cryogenic temperatures. The field sensitivity of a Hall probe depends inversely on carrier density, while the primary source of noise in the measurement is Johnson noise originating from the device resistance. hBN-encapsulated graphene demonstrates high carrier mobility at low carrier densities, therefore making it an ideal material for sensitive Hall probes. Furthermore, engineering the dielectric environment of graphene by encapsulating in hBN reduces low-frequency charge noise and disorder from the substrate. We outline our plans for adapting these devices for scanning, including characterization of the point spread function with a scanned current loop and fabrication of a deep-etched structure that enables positioning the sensitive area within 100 nanometers of the sample surface.

  18. Titanium diboride ceramic fiber composites for Hall-Heroult cells

    DOEpatents

    Besmann, Theodore M.; Lowden, Richard A.

    1990-01-01

    An improved cathode structure for Hall-Heroult cells for the electrolytic production of aluminum metal. This cathode structure is a preform fiber base material that is infiltrated with electrically conductive titanium diboride using chemical vapor infiltration techniques. The structure exhibits good fracture toughness, and is sufficiently resistant to attack by molten aluminum. Typically, the base can be made from a mat of high purity silicon carbide fibers. Other ceramic or carbon fibers that do not degrade at temperatures below about 1000 deg. C can be used.

  19. Generation of magnetic skyrmion bubbles by inhomogeneous spin Hall currents

    DOE PAGES

    Heinonen, Olle; Jiang, Wanjun; Somaily, Hamoud; ...

    2016-03-07

    Recent experiments have shown that magnetic skyrmion bubbles can be generated and injected at room temperature in thin films. In this study, we demonstrate, using micromagnetic modeling, that such skyrmions can be generated by an inhomogeneous spin Hall torque in the presence of Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interactions (DMIs). In the experimental Ta-Co 20Fe 60B 20 thin films, the DMI is rather small; nevertheless, the skyrmion bubbles are stable, or at least metastable on observational time scales.

  20. Ferromagnetic GaAs structures with single Mn delta-layer fabricated using laser deposition.

    PubMed

    Danilov, Yuri A; Vikhrova, Olga V; Kudrin, Alexey V; Zvonkov, Boris N

    2012-06-01

    The new technique combining metal-organic chemical vapor epitaxy with laser ablation of solid targets was used for fabrication of ferromagnetic GaAs structures with single Mn delta-doped layer. The structures demonstrated anomalous Hall effect, planar Hall effect, negative and anisotropic magnetoresistance in temperature range of 10-35 K. In GaAs structures with only single Mn delta-layer (without additional 2D hole gas channel or quantum well) ferromagnetism was observed for the first time.

  1. Global warming: it's not only size that matters

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Hegerl, Gabriele C.

    2011-09-01

    Observed and model simulated warming is particularly large in high latitudes, and hence the Arctic is often seen as the posterchild of vulnerability to global warming. However, Mahlstein et al (2011) point out that the signal of climate change is emerging locally from that of climate variability earliest in regions of low climate variability, based on climate model data, and in agreement with observations. This is because high latitude regions are not only regions of strong feedbacks that enhance the global warming signal, but also regions of substantial climate variability, driven by strong dynamics and enhanced by feedbacks (Hall 2004). Hence the spatial pattern of both observed warming and simulated warming for the 20th century shows strong warming in high latitudes, but this warming occurs against a backdrop of strong variability. Thus, the ratio of the warming to internal variability is not necessarily highest in the regions that warm fastest—and Mahlstein et al illustrate that it is actually the low-variability regions where the signal of local warming emerges first from that of climate variability. Thus, regions with strongest warming are neither the most important to diagnose that forcing changes climate, nor are they the regions which will necessarily experience the strongest impact. The importance of the signal-to-noise ratio has been known to the detection and attribution community, but has been buried in technical 'optimal fingerprinting' literature (e.g., Hasselmann 1979, Allen and Tett 1999), where it was used for an earlier detection of climate change by emphasizing aspects of the fingerprint of global warming associated with low variability in estimates of the observed warming. What, however, was not discussed was that the local signal-to-noise ratio is of interest also for local climate change: where temperatures emerge from the range visited by internal climate variability, it is reasonable to assume that changes in climate will also cause more impacts than temperatures that have occurred frequently due to internal climate variability. Determining when exactly temperatures enter unusual ranges may be done in many different ways (and the paper shows several, and more could be imagined), but the main result of first local emergence in low latitudes remains robust. A worrying factor is that the regions where the signal is expected to emerge first, or is already emerging are largely regions in Africa, parts of South and Central America, and the Maritime Continent; regions that are vulnerable to climate change for a variety of regions (see IPCC 2007), and regions which contribute generally little to global greenhouse gas emissions. In contrast, strong emissions of greenhouse gases occur in regions of low warming-to-variability ratio. To get even closer to the relevance of this finding for impacts, it would be interesting to place the emergence of highly unusual summer temperatures in the context not of internal variability, but in the context of variability experienced by the climate system prior to the 20th century, as, e.g. documented in palaeoclimatic reconstructions and simulated in simulations of the last millennium (see Jansen et al 2007). External forcing has moved the temperature range around more strongly for some regions and in some seasons than others. For example, while reconstructions of summer temperatures in Europe appear to show small long-term variations, winter shows deep drops in temperature in the little Ice Age and a long-term increase since then (Luterbacher et al 2004), which was at least partly caused by external forcing (Hegerl et al 2011a) and therefore 'natural variability' may be different from internal variability. A further interesting question in attempts to provide a climate-based proxy for impacts of climate change is: to what extent does the rapidity of change matter, and how does it compare to trends due to natural variability? It is reasonable to assume that fast changes impact ecosystems and society more than slow, gradual ones. Also, is it really the mean seasonal temperature that counts, or should the focus change to extremes (see Hegerl et al 2011b)? Is seasonal mean exceedance of the prior temperature envelope a good and robust measure that also reflects these other, more complex diagnostics? Lots of food for thought and research! References Allen M R and Tett S F B 1999 Checking for model consistency in optimal finger printing Clim. Dyn. 15 419-34 Hall A 2004 The role of surface albedo feedback in climate J. Clim. 17 1550-68 Hasselmann K 1979 On the signal-to-noise problem in atmospheric response studies Meteorology of Tropical Oceans ed D B Shaw (Bracknell: Royal Meteorological Society) pp 251-9 Hegerl G C, Luterbacher J, Gonzalez-Ruoco F, Tett S F B and Xoplaki E 2011a Influence of human and natural forcing on European seasonal temperatures Nature Geoscience 4 99-103 Hegerl G, Hanlon H and Beierkuhnlein C 2011b Climate science: elusive extremes Nature Geoscience 4 142-3 IPCC 2007 Climate Change 2007: Impacts, Adaption and Vulnerability. Contribution of Working Group II to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change ed M L Parry, O F Canziani, J P Palutikof, P J van der Linden and C E Hanson (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press) Jansen E et al 2007 Palaeoclimate Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis. Contribution of Working Group I to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change ed S Solomon et al (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press) Luterbacher J et al 2004 European seasonal and annual temperature variability, trends, and extremes since 1500 Science 303 1499-503 Mahlstein I, Knutti R, Solomon S and Portmann R W 2011 Early onset of significant local warming in low latitude countries Environ. Res. Lett. 6 034009

  2. The effects of temperature dependent recombination rates on performance of InGaN/GaN blue superluminescent light emitting diodes

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Moslehi Milani, N.; Mohadesi, V.; Asgari, A.

    2015-07-01

    The effects of temperature dependent radiative and nonradiative recombination (Shockley-Read-Hall, spontaneous radiative, and Auger coefficients) on the spectral and power characteristics of a blue multiple quantum well (MQW) superluminescent light emitting diode (SLD or SLED) have been studied. The study is based on the rate equations model, where three rate equations corresponding to MQW active region, separate confinement heterostructure (SCH) layer, and spectral density of optical power are solved self-consistently with no k-selection energy dependent gain and quasi-Fermi level functions at steady state. We have taken into account the temperature effects on Shockley-Read-Hall (SRH), spontaneous radiative, and Auger recombination in the rate equations and have investigated the effects of temperature rising from 300 K to 375 K at a fixed current density. We examine this procedure for a moderate current density and interpret the spectral radiation power and light output power diagrams. The investigation reveals that the main loss due to temperature is related to Auger coefficient.

  3. A Designed Room Temperature Multilayered Magnetic Semiconductor

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Bouma, Dinah Simone; Charilaou, Michalis; Bordel, Catherine; Duchin, Ryan; Barriga, Alexander; Farmer, Adam; Hellman, Frances; Materials Science Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab Team

    2015-03-01

    A room temperature magnetic semiconductor has been designed and fabricated by using an epitaxial antiferromagnet (NiO) grown in the (111) orientation, which gives surface uncompensated magnetism for an odd number of planes, layered with the lightly doped semiconductor Al-doped ZnO (AZO). Magnetization and Hall effect measurements of multilayers of NiO and AZO are presented for varying thickness of each. The magnetic properties vary as a function of the number of Ni planes in each NiO layer; an odd number of Ni planes yields on each NiO layer an uncompensated moment which is RKKY-coupled to the moments on adjacent NiO layers via the carriers in the AZO. This RKKY coupling oscillates with the AZO layer thickness, and it disappears entirely in samples where the AZO is replaced with undoped ZnO. The anomalous Hall effect data indicate that the carriers in the AZO are spin-polarized according to the direction of the applied field at both low temperature and room temperature. NiO/AZO multilayers are therefore a promising candidate for spintronic applications demanding a room-temperature semiconductor.

  4. Annealing of Heavily Boron-Doped Silicon: Effect on Electrical and Thermoelectric Properties.

    PubMed

    Zulian, Laura; Segrado, Francesco; Narducci, Dario

    2017-03-01

    In previous studies it was shown that heavily boron-doped nanocrystalline silicon submitted to thermal treatments at temperatures ≥800 °C is characterized by an anomalously high thermoelectric power factor. Its enhanced performances were ascribed to the formation of SiBx precipitates at grain boundary, leading to the formation of potential barriers that filter out low-energy carriers, then causing a simultaneous enhancement of the Seebeck coefficient and of the electrical conductivity. To further investigate the effect of thermal treatment on boron-doped nanocrystalline silicon, samples were submitted to a host of annealing processes or of sequences of them at temperatures between 900 and 1000 °C and for various amounts of time. Electrical conductivity and Hall effect measurements were carried out after each thermal treatment over the temperature range 20–300 K. They provided evidence of the formation of an impurity band, and of hopping conduction at very low temperatures. Hall resistivity data versus temperature provided therefore important insights in the electronic structure of the system, which will enable a more complete understanding of the factors ruling energy filtering in this class of materials.

  5. Occupant perception of indoor air and comfort in four hospitality environments.

    PubMed

    Moschandreas, D J; Chu, P

    2002-01-01

    This article reports on a survey of customer and staff perceptions of indoor air quality at two restaurants, a billiard hall, and a casino. The survey was conducted at each environment for 8 days: 2 weekend days on 2 consecutive weekends and 4 weekdays. Before and during the survey, each hospitality environment satisfied ventilation requirements set in ASHRAE Standard 62-1999, Ventilation for Acceptable Indoor Air. An objective of this study was to test the hypothesis: If a hospitality environment satisfies ASHRAE ventilation requirements, then the indoor air is acceptable, that is, fewer than 20% of the exposed occupants perceive the environment as unacceptable. A second objective was to develop a multiple regression model that predicts the dependent variable, the environment is acceptable, as a function of a number of independent perception variables. Occupant perception of environmental, comfort, and physical variables was measured using a questionnaire. This instrument was designed to be efficient and unobtrusive; subjects could complete it within 3 min. Significant differences of occupant environment perception were identified among customers and staff. The dependent variable, the environment is acceptable, is affected by temperature, occupant density, and occupant smoking status, odor perception, health conditions, sensitivity to chemicals, and enjoyment of activities. Depending on the hospitality environment, variation of independent variables explains as much as 77% of the variation of the dependent variable.

  6. Anomalous Hall effect in semiconductor quantum wells in proximity to chiral p -wave superconductors

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Yang, F.; Yu, T.; Wu, M. W.

    2018-05-01

    By using the gauge-invariant optical Bloch equation, we perform a microscopic kinetic investigation on the anomalous Hall effect in chiral p -wave superconducting states. Specifically, the intrinsic anomalous Hall conductivity in the absence of the magnetic field is zero as a consequence of Galilean invariance in our description. As for the extrinsic channel, a finite anomalous Hall current is obtained from the impurity scattering with the optically excited normal quasiparticle current even at zero temperature. From our kinetic description, it can be clearly seen that the excited normal quasiparticle current is due to an induced center-of-mass momentum of Cooper pairs through the acceleration driven by ac electric field. For the induced anomalous Hall current, we show that the conventional skew-scattering channel in the linear response makes the dominant contribution in the strong impurity interaction. In this case, our kinetic description as a supplementary viewpoint mostly confirms the results of Kubo formalism in the literature. Nevertheless, in the weak impurity interaction, this skew-scattering channel becomes marginal and we reveal that an induction channel from the Born contribution dominates the anomalous Hall current. This channel, which has long been overlooked in the literature, is due to the particle-hole asymmetry by nonlinear optical excitation. Finally, we study the case in the chiral p -wave superconducting state with a transverse conical magnetization, which breaks the Galilean invariance. In this situation, the intrinsic anomalous Hall conductivity is no longer zero. Comparison of this intrinsic channel with the extrinsic one from impurity scattering is addressed.

  7. Non-Contact Thermal Characterization of NASA's HERMeS Hall Thruster

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Huang, Wensheng; Kamhawi, Hani; Myers, James L.; Yim, John T.; Neff, Gregory

    2015-01-01

    The thermal characterization test of NASA's 12.5-kW Hall Effect Rocket with Magnetic Shielding has been completed. This thruster was developed to support a number of potential Solar Electric Propulsion Technology Demonstration Mission concepts, including the Asteroid Redirect Robotic Mission concept. As a part of the preparation for this characterization test, an infrared-based, non-contact thermal imaging system was developed to measure the temperature of various thruster surfaces that are exposed to high voltage or plasma. An in-situ calibration array was incorporated into the setup to improve the accuracy of the temperature measurement. The key design parameters for the calibration array were determined in a separate pilot test. The raw data from the characterization test was analyzed though further work is needed to obtain accurate anode temperatures. Examination of the front pole and discharge channel temperatures showed that the thruster temperature was driven more by discharge voltage than by discharge power. Operation at lower discharge voltages also yielded more uniform temperature distributions than at higher discharge voltages. When operating at high discharge voltage, increasing the magnetic field strength appeared to have made the thermal loading azimuthally more uniform.

  8. Quantum Hall effect in epitaxial graphene with permanent magnets.

    PubMed

    Parmentier, F D; Cazimajou, T; Sekine, Y; Hibino, H; Irie, H; Glattli, D C; Kumada, N; Roulleau, P

    2016-12-06

    We have observed the well-kown quantum Hall effect (QHE) in epitaxial graphene grown on silicon carbide (SiC) by using, for the first time, only commercial NdFeB permanent magnets at low temperature. The relatively large and homogeneous magnetic field generated by the magnets, together with the high quality of the epitaxial graphene films, enables the formation of well-developed quantum Hall states at Landau level filling factors v = ±2, commonly observed with superconducting electro-magnets. Furthermore, the chirality of the QHE edge channels can be changed by a top gate. These results demonstrate that basic QHE physics are experimentally accessible in graphene for a fraction of the price of conventional setups using superconducting magnets, which greatly increases the potential of the QHE in graphene for research and applications.

  9. Quantum Hall signatures of dipolar Mahan excitons

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Schinner, G. J.; Repp, J.; Kowalik-Seidl, K.; Schubert, E.; Stallhofer, M. P.; Rai, A. K.; Reuter, D.; Wieck, A. D.; Govorov, A. O.; Holleitner, A. W.; Kotthaus, J. P.

    2013-01-01

    We explore the photoluminescence of spatially indirect, dipolar Mahan excitons in a gated double quantum well diode containing a mesoscopic electrostatic trap for neutral dipolar excitons at low temperatures down to 250 mK and in quantizing magnetic fields. Mahan excitons in the surrounding of the trap, consisting of individual holes interacting with a degenerate two-dimensional electron system confined in one of the quantum wells, exhibit strong quantum Hall signatures at integer filling factors and related anomalies around filling factor ν=(2)/(3),(3)/(5), and (1)/(2), reflecting the formation of composite fermions. Interactions across the trap perimeter are found to influence the energy of the confined neutral dipolar excitons by the presence of the quantum Hall effects in the two-dimensional electron system surrounding the trap.

  10. Normal state transport studies of Bi2Sr2 Ca n-1CunOy thin films at different doping levels and manifestation of the pseudogap

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Raffy, H.

    2002-03-01

    We have studied the evolution of the transport properties of Bi2Sr2 Ca n-1CunOy (n=1, 2) epitaxial thin films as function of doping p. For each phase, this was done on a single film by changing the oxygen content going from a maximally overdoped to a strongly underdoped non superconducting state(Z. Konstantinovic, Z.Z. Li and H. Raffy, Physica C 351, 163 (2001)). The behaviour of the resistance versus T and of the Hall effect will be described in the different regions of the phase diagram. In the underdoped region the pseudogap manifests itself on R(T) by a more rapid decrease or a reduction of the scattering rate below a temperature T*, representing an energy /temperature scale. It is observed that the resistivity curves can be scaled to a universal curve as a function of T/T*. Magnetoresistance measurements performed up to 20 Teslas do not show any significant change of this curve or of T*. The Hall constant RH(T) shows similar temperature dependence for both phases, with a broad maximum around 100K. The cotangent of the Hall angle can be described, above a temperature T0 (p), by a law of the form a+bT^m with 1.65

  11. Performance and Facility Background Pressure Characterization Tests of NASAs 12.5-kW Hall Effect Rocket with Magnetic Shielding Thruster

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Kamhawi, Hani; Huang, Wensheng; Haag, Thomas; Shastry, Rohit; Thomas, Robert; Yim, John; Herman, Daniel; Williams, George; Myers, James; Hofer, Richard; hide

    2015-01-01

    NASA's Space Technology Mission Directorate (STMD) Solar Electric Propulsion Technology Demonstration Mission (SEP/TDM) project is funding the development of a 12.5-kW Hall thruster system to support future NASA missions. The thruster designated Hall Effect Rocket with Magnetic Shielding (HERMeS) is a 12.5-kW Hall thruster with magnetic shielding incorporating a centrally mounted cathode. HERMeS was designed and modeled by a NASA GRC and JPL team and was fabricated and tested in vacuum facility 5 (VF5) at NASA GRC. Tests at NASA GRC were performed with the Technology Development Unit 1 (TDU1) thruster. TDU1's magnetic shielding topology was confirmed by measurement of anode potential and low electron temperature along the discharge chamber walls. Thermal characterization tests indicated that during full power thruster operation at peak magnetic field strength, the various thruster component temperatures were below prescribed maximum allowable limits. Performance characterization tests demonstrated the thruster's wide throttling range and found that the thruster can achieve a peak thruster efficiency of 63% at 12.5 kW 500 V and can attain a specific impulse of 3,000 s at 12.5 kW and a discharge voltage of 800 V. Facility background pressure variation tests revealed that the performance, operational characteristics, and magnetic shielding effectiveness of the TDU1 design were mostly insensitive to increases in background pressure.

  12. ADHM and the 4d quantum Hall effect

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Barns-Graham, Alec; Dorey, Nick; Lohitsiri, Nakarin; Tong, David; Turner, Carl

    2018-04-01

    Yang-Mills instantons are solitonic particles in d = 4 + 1 dimensional gauge theories. We construct and analyse the quantum Hall states that arise when these particles are restricted to the lowest Landau level. We describe the ground state wavefunctions for both Abelian and non-Abelian quantum Hall states. Although our model is purely bosonic, we show that the excitations of this 4d quantum Hall state are governed by the Nekrasov partition function of a certain five dimensional supersymmetric gauge theory with Chern-Simons term. The partition function can also be interpreted as a variant of the Hilbert series of the instanton moduli space, counting holomorphic sections rather than holomorphic functions. It is known that the Hilbert series of the instanton moduli space can be rewritten using mirror symmetry of 3d gauge theories in terms of Coulomb branch variables. We generalise this approach to include the effect of a five dimensional Chern-Simons term. We demonstrate that the resulting Coulomb branch formula coincides with the corresponding Higgs branch Molien integral which, in turn, reproduces the standard formula for the Nekrasov partition function.

  13. Roommate Changes in Residence Halls: Can They Be Predicted?

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Hallisey, Jacqueline N.; Harren, Vincent A.; Caple, Richard B.

    2015-01-01

    The purpose of this study was to examine the demographic and academic variables of students involved in roommate changes to determine which variables predict who will move from a room and who will stay in a room and what alternatives to current housing arrangements are selected by those who initiate the roommate changes. [This article was…

  14. Integrated Stirling Convertor and Hall Thruster Test Conducted

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Mason, Lee S.

    2002-01-01

    An important aspect of implementing Stirling Radioisotope Generators on future NASA missions is the integration of the generator and controller with potential spacecraft loads. Some recent studies have indicated that the combination of Stirling Radioisotope Generators and electric propulsion devices offer significant trip time and payload fraction benefits for deep space missions. A test was devised to begin to understand the interactions between Stirling generators and electric thrusters. An electrically heated RG- 350 (350-W output) Stirling convertor, designed and built by Stirling Technology Company of Kennewick, Washington, under a NASA Small Business Innovation Research agreement, was coupled to a 300-W SPT-50 Hall-effect thruster built for NASA by the Moscow Aviation Institute (RIAME). The RG-350 and the SPT-50 shown, were installed in adjacent vacuum chamber ports at NASA Glenn Research Center's Electric Propulsion Laboratory, Vacuum Facility 8. The Stirling electrical controller interfaced directly with the Hall thruster power-processing unit, both of which were located outside of the vacuum chamber. The power-processing unit accepted the 48 Vdc output from the Stirling controller and distributed the power to all the loads of the SPT-50, including the magnets, keeper, heater, and discharge. On February 28, 2001, the Glenn test team successfully operated the Hall-effect thruster with the Stirling convertor. This is the world's first known test of a dynamic power source with electric propulsion. The RG-350 successfully managed the transition from the purely resistive load bank within the Stirling controller to the highly capacitive power-processing unit load. At the time of the demonstration, the Stirling convertor was operating at a hot temperature of 530 C and a cold temperature of -6 C. The linear alternator was producing approximately 250 W at 109 Vac, while the power-processing unit was drawing 175 W at 48 Vdc. The majority of power was delivered to the Hall thruster discharge circuit operating at 115 Vdc and 0.9 A. Testing planned for late 2001 will examine the possibility of directly driving the Hall thruster discharge circuit using rectified and filtered output from the Stirling alternator.

  15. Crystal growth of magnetic dihydride GdxY1-xH2 for generation of spin current

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Sakuraba, T.; Hirama, H.; Sakai, M.; Honda, Z.; Hayakawa, M.; Okoshi, T.; Kitajima, A.; Oshima, A.; Higuchi, K.; Hasegawa, S.

    2013-09-01

    Crystal growth of pure phases of GdxY1-xH2 (0≤x≤1) was successfully carried out by depositing GdxY1-x films and their hydrogenation, the growth results of which were investigated by X-ray diffraction measurements as well as temperature (T) dependence of magnetic susceptibility (χ). The fcc lattice constant in GdxY1-xH2 is found to be linearly increased with increasing x. Behavior characteristic to the para-to-antiferromagnetic transition are clearly observed in the χ-T curve for x=0.39, 0.47, 0.76, and 1.0 cases. The Néel temperature (TN) is found to be linearly decreased with decreasing x from x=1.0 (GdH2), and is predicted to show TN=0 K at x˜0.1 by extrapolating TN from large x region, implying the antiferromagnetic order disappears at x˜0.1. The quasi-zero Hall effect was observed for x=0, 0.19, 0.37, 0.39, and 0.47 cases, whereas a moderate Hall effect is observed for x=0.76 and 1.0 cases. The type of Hall effect is also discussed.

  16. Effects of deposition temperatures on structure and physical properties of Cd 1-xZn xTe films prepared by RF magnetron sputtering

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Zeng, Dongmei; Jie, Wanqi; Zhou, Hai; Yang, Yingge

    2010-02-01

    Cd 1-xZn xTe films were deposited by RF magnetron sputtering from Cd 0.9Zn 0.1Te crystals target at different substrate temperatures (100-400 °C). The effects of the deposition temperature on structure and physical properties of Cd 1-xZn xTe films have been studied using X-ray diffraction (XRD), step profilometer, atomic force microscopy (AFM), ultraviolet spectrophotometer and Hall effect measurements. X-ray studies suggest that the deposited films were polycrystalline with preferential (1 1 1) orientation. AFM micrographs show that the grain size was changed from 50 to 250 nm with the increase of deposition temperatures, the increased grain size may result from kinetic factors during sputtering growth. The optical transmission data indicate that shallow absorption edge occurs in the range of 744-835 nm and that the optical absorption coefficient is varied with the increase of deposition temperatures. In Hall Effect measurements, the sheet resistivities of the deposited films are 3.2×10 8, 3.0×10 8, 1.9×10 8 and 1.1×10 8 Ohm/sq, which were decreased with the increase of substrate temperatures. Analysis of the resistivity of films depended on the substrate temperatures is discussed.

  17. Temperature independent quantum well FET with delta channel doping

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Young, P. G.; Mena, R. A.; Alterovitz, S. A.; Schacham, S. E.; Haugland, E. J.

    1992-01-01

    A temperature independent device is presented which uses a quantum well structure and delta doping within the channel. The device requires a high delta doping concentration within the channel to achieve a constant Hall mobility and carrier concentration across the temperature range 300-1.4 K. Transistors were RF tested using on-wafer probing and a constant G sub max and F sub max were measured over the temperature range 300-70 K.

  18. Large power factor and anomalous Hall effect and their correlation with observed linear magneto resistance in Co-doped Bi2Se3 3D topological insulator

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Singh, Rahul; Shukla, K. K.; Kumar, A.; Okram, G. S.; Singh, D.; Ganeshan, V.; Lakhani, Archana; Ghosh, A. K.; Chatterjee, Sandip

    2016-09-01

    Magnetoresistance (MR), thermo power, magnetization and Hall effect measurements have been performed on Co-doped Bi2Se3 topological insulators. The undoped sample shows that the maximum MR as a destructive interference due to a π-Berry phase leads to a decrease of MR. As the Co is doped, the linearity in MR is increased. The observed MR of Bi2Se3 can be explained with the classical model. The low temperature MR behavior of Co doped samples cannot be explained with the same model, but can be explained with the quantum linear MR model. Magnetization behavior indicates the establishment of ferromagnetic ordering with Co doping. Hall effect data also supports the establishment of ferromagnetic ordering in Co-doped Bi2Se3 samples by showing the anomalous Hall effect. Furthermore, when spectral weight suppression is insignificant, Bi2Se3 behaves as a dilute magnetic semiconductor. Moreover, the maximum power factor is observed when time reversal symmetry (TRS) is maintained. As the TRS is broken the power factor value is decreased, which indicates that with the rise of Dirac cone above the Fermi level the anomalous Hall effect and linearity in MR increase and the power factor decreases.

  19. Disorder-induced half-integer quantized conductance plateau in quantum anomalous Hall insulator-superconductor structures

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Huang, Yingyi; Setiawan, F.; Sau, Jay D.

    2018-03-01

    A weak superconducting proximity effect in the vicinity of the topological transition of a quantum anomalous Hall system has been proposed as a venue to realize a topological superconductor (TSC) with chiral Majorana edge modes (CMEMs). A recent experiment [Science 357, 294 (2017), 10.1126/science.aag2792] claimed to have observed such CMEMs in the form of a half-integer quantized conductance plateau in the two-terminal transport measurement of a quantum anomalous Hall-superconductor junction. Although the presence of a superconducting proximity effect generically splits the quantum Hall transition into two phase transitions with a gapped TSC in between, in this Rapid Communication we propose that a nearly flat conductance plateau, similar to that expected from CMEMs, can also arise from the percolation of quantum Hall edges well before the onset of the TSC or at temperatures much above the TSC gap. Our Rapid Communication, therefore, suggests that, in order to confirm the TSC, it is necessary to supplement the observation of the half-quantized conductance plateau with a hard superconducting gap (which is unlikely for a disordered system) from the conductance measurements or the heat transport measurement of the transport gap. Alternatively, the half-quantized thermal conductance would also serve as a smoking-gun signature of the TSC.

  20. Self-consistent study of local and nonlocal magnetoresistance in a YIG/Pt bilayer

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Wang, Xi-guang; Zhou, Zhen-wei; Nie, Yao-zhuang; Xia, Qing-lin; Guo, Guang-hua

    2018-03-01

    We present a self-consistent study of the local spin Hall magnetoresistance (SMR) and nonlocal magnon-mediated magnetoresistance (MMR) in a heavy-metal/magnetic-insulator heterostructure at finite temperature. We find that the thermal fluctuation of magnetization significantly affects the SMR. It appears unidirectional with respect to the direction of electrical current (or magnetization). The unidirectionality of SMR originates from the asymmetry of creation or annihilation of thermal magnons induced by the spin Hall torque. Also, a self-consistent model can well describe the features of MMR.

  1. Titanium diboride ceramic fiber composites for Hall-Heroult cells

    DOEpatents

    Besmann, T.M.; Lowden, R.A.

    1990-05-29

    An improved cathode structure is described for Hall-Heroult cells for the electrolytic production of aluminum metal. This cathode structure is a preform fiber base material that is infiltrated with electrically conductive titanium diboride using chemical vapor infiltration techniques. The structure exhibits good fracture toughness, and is sufficiently resistant to attack by molten aluminum. Typically, the base can be made from a mat of high purity silicon carbide fibers. Other ceramic or carbon fibers that do not degrade at temperatures below about 1000 C can be used.

  2. Experimental and Numerical Examination of a Hall Thruster Plume (Preprint)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2007-07-31

    Hall thruster has been characterized through measurements from various plasma electrostatic probes. Ion current flux, plasma potential, plasma density, and electron temperatures were measured from the near-field plume to 60 cm downstream of the exit plane. These experimentally derived measurements were compared to numerical simulations run with the plasma plume code DRACO. A major goal of this study was to determine the fidelity of the DRACO numerical simulation. The effect of background pressure on the thruster plume was also examined using ion current flux measurements

  3. Electrical transport, electrothermal transport, and effective electron mass in single-crystalline In2O3 films

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Preissler, Natalie; Bierwagen, Oliver; Ramu, Ashok T.; Speck, James S.

    2013-08-01

    A comprehensive study of the room-temperature electrical and electrothermal transport of single-crystalline indium oxide (In2O3) and indium tin oxide (ITO) films over a wide range of electron concentrations is reported. We measured the room-temperature Hall mobility μH and Seebeck coefficient S of unintentionally doped and Sn-doped high-quality, plasma-assisted molecular-beam-epitaxy-grown In2O3 for volume Hall electron concentrations nH from 7×1016 cm-3 (unintentionally doped) to 1×1021 cm-3 (highly Sn-doped, ITO). The resulting empirical S(nH) relation can be directly used in other In2O3 samples to estimate the volume electron concentration from simple Seebeck coefficient measurements. The mobility and Seebeck coefficient were modeled by a numerical solution of the Boltzmann transport equation. Ionized impurity scattering and polar optical phonon scattering were found to be the dominant scattering mechanisms. Acoustic phonon scattering was found to be negligible. Fitting the temperature-dependent mobility above room temperature of an In2O3 film with high mobility allowed us to find the effective Debye temperature (ΘD=700 K) and number of phonon modes (NOPML=1.33) that best describe the polar optical phonon scattering. The modeling also yielded the Hall scattering factor rH as a function of electron concentration, which is not negligible (rH≈1.4) at nondegenerate electron concentrations. Fitting the Hall-scattering-factor corrected concentration-dependent Seebeck coefficient S(n) for nondegenerate samples to the numerical solution of the Boltzmann transport equation and to widely used, simplified equations allowed us to extract an effective electron mass of m*=(0.30±0.03)me (with free electron mass me). The modeled mobility and Seebeck coefficient based on polar optical phonon and ionized impurity scattering describes the experimental results very accurately up to electron concentrations of 1019 cm-3, and qualitatively explains a mobility plateau or local maximum around 1020 cm-3. Ionized impurity scattering with doubly charged donors best describes the mobility in our unintentionally doped films, consistent with oxygen vacancies as unintentional shallow donors, whereas singly charged donors best describe our Sn-doped films. Our modeling yields a (phonon-limited) maximum theoretical drift mobility and Hall mobility of μ=190 cm2/Vs and μH=270 cm2/Vs, respectively. Simplified equations for the Seebeck coefficient describe the measured values in the nondegenerate regime using a Seebeck scattering parameter of r=-0.55 (which is consistent with the determined Debye temperature), and provide an estimate of the Seebeck coefficient to lower electron concentrations. The simplified equations fail to describe the Seebeck coefficient around the Mott transition (nMott=5.5×1018 cm-3) from nondegenerate to degenerate electron concentrations, whereas the numerical modeling accurately describes this region.

  4. Critical increase in Na-doping facilitates acceptor band movements that yields ~180 meV shallow hole conduction in ZnO bulk crystals

    PubMed Central

    Parmar, Narendra S.; Yim, Haena; Choi, Ji-Won

    2017-01-01

    Stable p-type conduction in ZnO has been a long time obstacle in utilizing its full potential such as in opto-electronic devices. We designed a unique experimental set-up in the laboratory for high Na-doping by thermal diffusion in the bulk ZnO single crystals. SIMS measurement shows that Na concentration increases by 3 orders of magnitude, to ~3 × 1020 cm−3 as doping temperature increases to 1200 °C. Electronic infrared absorption was measured for Na-acceptors. Absorption bands were observed near (0.20–0.24) eV. Absorption bands blue shifted by 0.04 eV when doped at 1200 °C giving rise to shallow acceptor level. NaZn band movements as a function of doping temperature are also seen in Photoluminescence emission (PL), Photoluminescence excitation (PLE) and UV-Vis transmission measurements. Variable temperature Hall measurements show stable p-type conduction with hole binding energy ~0.18 eV in ZnO samples that were Na-doped at 1200 °C. PMID:28272444

  5. Microbial contamination level of air in animal waste utilization plants.

    PubMed

    Chmielowiec-Korzeniowska, Anna; Tymczyna, Leszek; Drabik, Agata; Krzosek, Łukasz

    2016-01-01

    The aim of this research was evaluation of microbial contamination of air within and in the vicinity of animal waste disposal plants. Air samples were analyzed to determine total bacterial and fungal counts as well as microbial species composition. Measurements of climate conditions (temperature, humidity, air motion) and total dust concentration were also performed. Total numbers of bacteria and fungi surpassed the threshold limit values for production halls. The most abundant bacteria detected were those consisting of physiological microflora of animal dermis and mucosa. Fungal species composition proved to be most differentiated in the air beyond the plant area. Aspergillus versicolor, a pathogenic and allergenic filamentous fungus, was isolated only inside the rendering plant processing hall. The measurement results showed a low sanitary-hygienic state of air in the plant processing halls and substantial air pollution in its immediate vicinity.

  6. 14 GHz longitudinally detected electron spin resonance using microHall sensors

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Bouterfas, M.; Mouaziz, S.; Popovic, R. S.

    2017-09-01

    In this work we developed a home-made LOngitudinally Detected Electron Spin Resonance (LODESR) spectrometer based on a microsize Hall sensor. A coplanar waveguide (CPW)-resonator is used to induce microwave-excitation on the sample at 14 GHz. We used InSb cross-shaped Hall devices with active areas of (10 μm × 10 μm) and (5 μm × 5 μm) . Signal intensities of the longitudinal magnetization component of DPPH and YIG samples of volumes about (10 μm) 3 and (5 μm) 3 , are measured under amplitude and frequency modulated microwave magnetic field generated by the CPW-resonator. At room temperature, 109spins /G √Hz sensitivity is achieved for 0.2mT linewidth, a result which is still better than most of inductive detected LODESR sensitivities.

  7. Local Thermometry of Neutral Modes on the Quantum Hall Edge

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Hart, Sean; Venkatachalam, Vivek; Pfeiffer, Loren; West, Ken; Yacoby, Amir

    2012-02-01

    A system of electrons in two dimensions and strong magnetic fields can be tuned to create a gapped 2D system with one dimensional channels along the edge. Interactions among these edge modes can lead to independent transport of charge and heat, even in opposite directions. Measuring the chirality and transport properties of these charge and heat modes can reveal otherwise hidden structure in the edge. Here, we heat the outer edge of such a quantum Hall system using a quantum point contact. By placing quantum dots upstream and downstream along the edge of the heater, we can measure both the chemical potential and temperature of that edge to study charge and heat transport, respectively. We find that charge is transported exclusively downstream, but heat can be transported upstream when the edge has additional structure related to fractional quantum Hall physics.

  8. Effect of InSb/In0.9Al0.1Sb superlattice buffer layer on the structural and electronic properties of InSb films

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Zhao, Xiaomeng; Zhang, Yang; Guan, Min; Cui, Lijie; Wang, Baoqiang; Zhu, Zhanping; Zeng, Yiping

    2017-07-01

    The effect of InSb/In0.9Al0.1Sb buffer layers on InSb thin films grown on GaAs (0 0 1) substrate by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) is investigated. The crystal quality and the surface morphology of InSb are characterized by XRD and AFM. The carrier transport property is researched through variable temperature hall test. The sharp interface between InSb/In0.9Al0.1Sb is demonstrated important for the high quality InSb thin film. We try different superlattice buffer layers by changing ratios, 2-0.5, thickness, 300-450 nm, and periods, 20-50. According to the function of the dislocation density to the absolute temperature below 150 K with different periods of SL buffers, we can find that the number of periods of superlattice is a major factor to decrease the density of threading dislocations. With the 50 periods SL buffer layer, the electron mobility of InSb at the room temperature and liquid nitrogen cooling temperature is ∼63,000 and ∼4600 cm2/V s, respectively. We deduce that the interface in the SL structure works as a filter layer to prevent the dislocation propagating to the upper InSb thin films.

  9. Extraordinary Hall resistance and unconventional magnetoresistance in Pt/LaCoO 3 hybrids

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Shang, T.; Zhan, Q. F.; Yang, H. L.; Zuo, Z. H.; Xie, Y. L.; Zhang, Y.; Liu, L. P.; Wang, B. M.; Wu, Y. H.; Zhang, S.; Li, Run-Wei

    2015-10-01

    We report an investigation of transverse Hall resistance and longitudinal resistance on Pt thin films sputtered on epitaxial LaCoO3 (LCO) ferromagnetic insulator films. The LaCoO3 films were deposited on several single crystalline substrates [LaAlO3,(La,Sr)(Al,Ta)O3, and SrTiO3] with (001) orientation. The physical properties of LaCoO3 films were characterized by the measurements of magnetic and transport properties. The LaCoO3 films undergo a paramagnetic to ferromagnetic (FM) transition at Curie temperatures ranging from 40 to 85 K, below which the Pt/LCO hybrids exhibit significant extraordinary Hall resistance up to 50 m Ω and unconventional magnetoresistance ratio Δ ρ /ρ0 about 1.2 ×10-4 , accompanied by the conventional magnetoresistance. The observed spin transport properties share some common features as well as some unique characteristics when compared with well-studied Y3Fe5O12 -based Pt thin films. Our findings call for new theories since the extraordinary Hall resistance and magnetoresistance cannot be consistently explained by the existing theories.

  10. Segmented electrode hall thruster with reduced plume

    DOEpatents

    Fisch, Nathaniel J.; Raitses, Yevgeny

    2004-08-17

    An apparatus and method for thrusting plasma, utilizing a Hall thruster with segmented electrodes along the channel, which make the acceleration region as localized as possible. Also disclosed are methods of arranging the electrodes so as to minimize erosion and arcing. Also disclosed are methods of arranging the electrodes so as to produce a substantial reduction in plume divergence. The use of electrodes made of emissive material will reduce the radial potential drop within the channel, further decreasing the plume divergence. Also disclosed is a method of arranging and powering these electrodes so as to provide variable mode operation.

  11. Mover Position Detection for PMTLM Based on Linear Hall Sensors through EKF Processing

    PubMed Central

    Yan, Leyang; Zhang, Hui; Ye, Peiqing

    2017-01-01

    Accurate mover position is vital for a permanent magnet tubular linear motor (PMTLM) control system. In this paper, two linear Hall sensors are utilized to detect the mover position. However, Hall sensor signals contain third-order harmonics, creating errors in mover position detection. To filter out the third-order harmonics, a signal processing method based on the extended Kalman filter (EKF) is presented. The limitation of conventional processing method is first analyzed, and then EKF is adopted to detect the mover position. In the EKF model, the amplitude of the fundamental component and the percentage of the harmonic component are taken as state variables, and they can be estimated based solely on the measured sensor signals. Then, the harmonic component can be calculated and eliminated. The proposed method has the advantages of faster convergence, better stability and higher accuracy. Finally, experimental results validate the effectiveness and superiority of the proposed method. PMID:28383505

  12. A low-temperature study of manganese-induced ferromagnetism and valence band convergence in tin telluride

    DOE PAGES

    Chi, Hang; Tan, Gangjian; Kanatzidis, Mercouri G.; ...

    2016-05-02

    In this study, SnTe is renowned for its promise in advancing energy-related technologies based on thermoelectricity and for its topological crystalline insulator character. Here, we demonstrate that each Mn atom introduces ~4 μ B (Bohr magneton) of magnetic moment to Sn 1–xMn xTe. The Curie temperatureTC reaches ~14K for x = 0.12, as observed in the field dependent hysteresis of magnetization and the anomalous Hall effect. In accordance with a modified two-band electronic Kane model, the light L-valence-band and the heavy Σ-valence-band gradually converge in energy with increasing Mn concentration, leading to a decreasing ordinary Hall coefficient R H andmore » a favorably enhanced Seebeck coefficient S at the same time. With the thermal conductivityκ lowered chiefly via point defects associated with the incorporation of Mn, the strategy of Mn doping also bodes well for efficient thermoelectric applications at elevated temperatures.« less

  13. Divacancy-hydrogen complexes in dislocation-free high-purity germanium. [Annealing, Hall effect, steady-state concentration energy dependence

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Haller, E.E.; Hubbard, G.S.; Hansen, W.L.

    1976-09-01

    A defect center with a single acceptor level at E/sub v/ + 0.08 eV appears in H/sub 2/-grown dislocation-free high-purity germanium. Its concentration changes reversibly upon annealing up to 650 K. By means of Hall-effect and conductivity measurements over a large temperature range the temperature dependence of the steady-state concentration between 450 and 720 K as well as the transients following changes in temperature were determined. The observed acceptor level is attributed to the divacancy-hydrogen complex V/sub 2/H. The complex reacts with hydrogen, dissolved in the Ge lattice or stored in traps, according to V/sub 2/H + H reversible V/submore » 2/H/sub 2/. An energy level associated with the divacancy-dihydrogen complex was not observed. These results are in good agreement with the idea that hydrogen in germanium forms a ''very deep donor'' (i.e., the energy level lies inside the valence band).« less

  14. Hall effects on unsteady MHD oscillatory free convective flow of second grade fluid through porous medium between two vertical plates

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    VeeraKrishna, M.; Subba Reddy, G.; Chamkha, A. J.

    2018-02-01

    The effects of radiation and Hall current on an unsteady magnetohydrodynamic free convective flow in a vertical channel filled with a porous medium have been studied. We consider an incompressible viscous and electrically conducting incompressible viscous second grade fluid bounded by a loosely packed porous medium. The fluid is driven by an oscillating pressure gradient parallel to the channel plates, and the entire flow field is subjected to a uniform inclined magnetic field of strength Ho inclined at an angle of inclination α with the normal to the boundaries in the transverse xy-plane. The temperature of one of the plates varies periodically, and the temperature difference of the plates is high enough to induce the radiative heat transfer. The effects of various parameters on the velocity profiles, the skin friction, temperature field, rate of heat transfer in terms of their amplitude, and phase angles are shown graphically.

  15. Highly-ordered wide bandgap materials for quantized anomalous Hall and magnetoelectric effects

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Otrokov, M. M.; Menshchikova, T. V.; Vergniory, M. G.; Rusinov, I. P.; Vyazovskaya, A. Yu; Koroteev, Yu M.; Bihlmayer, G.; Ernst, A.; Echenique, P. M.; Arnau, A.; Chulkov, E. V.

    2017-06-01

    An interplay of spin-orbit coupling and intrinsic magnetism is known to give rise to the quantum anomalous Hall and topological magnetoelectric effects under certain conditions. Their realization could open access to low power consumption electronics as well as many fundamental phenomena like image magnetic monopoles, Majorana fermions and others. Unfortunately, being realized very recently, these effects are only accessible at extremely low temperatures and the lack of appropriate materials that would enable the temperature increase is a most severe challenge. Here, we propose a novel material platform with unique combination of properties making it perfectly suitable for the realization of both effects at elevated temperatures. The key element of the computational material design is an extension of a topological insulator (TI) surface by a thin film of ferromagnetic insulator, which is both structurally and compositionally compatible with the TI. Following this proposal we suggest a variety of specific systems and discuss their numerous advantages, in particular wide band gaps with the Fermi level located in the gap.

  16. Deep level transient spectroscopic investigation of phosphorus-doped silicon by self-assembled molecular monolayers.

    PubMed

    Gao, Xuejiao; Guan, Bin; Mesli, Abdelmadjid; Chen, Kaixiang; Dan, Yaping

    2018-01-09

    It is known that self-assembled molecular monolayer doping technique has the advantages of forming ultra-shallow junctions and introducing minimal defects in semiconductors. In this paper, we report however the formation of carbon-related defects in the molecular monolayer-doped silicon as detected by deep-level transient spectroscopy and low-temperature Hall measurements. The molecular monolayer doping process is performed by modifying silicon substrate with phosphorus-containing molecules and annealing at high temperature. The subsequent rapid thermal annealing drives phosphorus dopants along with carbon contaminants into the silicon substrate, resulting in a dramatic decrease of sheet resistance for the intrinsic silicon substrate. Low-temperature Hall measurements and secondary ion mass spectrometry indicate that phosphorus is the only electrically active dopant after the molecular monolayer doping. However, during this process, at least 20% of the phosphorus dopants are electrically deactivated. The deep-level transient spectroscopy shows that carbon-related defects are responsible for such deactivation.

  17. Above 400-K robust perpendicular ferromagnetic phase in a topological insulator

    PubMed Central

    Tang, Chi; Chang, Cui-Zu; Zhao, Gejian; Liu, Yawen; Jiang, Zilong; Liu, Chao-Xing; McCartney, Martha R.; Smith, David J.; Chen, Tingyong; Moodera, Jagadeesh S.; Shi, Jing

    2017-01-01

    The quantum anomalous Hall effect (QAHE) that emerges under broken time-reversal symmetry in topological insulators (TIs) exhibits many fascinating physical properties for potential applications in nanoelectronics and spintronics. However, in transition metal–doped TIs, the only experimentally demonstrated QAHE system to date, the QAHE is lost at practically relevant temperatures. This constraint is imposed by the relatively low Curie temperature (Tc) and inherent spin disorder associated with the random magnetic dopants. We demonstrate drastically enhanced Tc by exchange coupling TIs to Tm3Fe5O12, a high-Tc magnetic insulator with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy. Signatures showing that the TI surface states acquire robust ferromagnetism are revealed by distinct squared anomalous Hall hysteresis loops at 400 K. Point-contact Andreev reflection spectroscopy confirms that the TI surface is spin-polarized. The greatly enhanced Tc, absence of spin disorder, and perpendicular anisotropy are all essential to the occurrence of the QAHE at high temperatures. PMID:28691097

  18. Performance and Thermal Characterization of the NASA-300MS 20 kW Hall Effect Thruster

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Kamhawi, Hani; Huang, Wensheng; Haag, Thomas; Shastry, Rohit; Soulas, George; Smith, Timothy; Mikellides, Ioannis; Hofer, Richard

    2013-01-01

    NASA's Space Technology Mission Directorate is sponsoring the development of a high fidelity 15 kW-class long-life high performance Hall thruster for candidate NASA technology demonstration missions. An essential element of the development process is demonstration that incorporation of magnetic shielding on a 20 kW-class Hall thruster will yield significant improvements in the throughput capability of the thruster without any significant reduction in thruster performance. As such, NASA Glenn Research Center and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory collaborated on modifying the NASA-300M 20 kW Hall thruster to improve its propellant throughput capability. JPL and NASA Glenn researchers performed plasma numerical simulations with JPL's Hall2De and a commercially available magnetic modeling code that indicated significant enhancement in the throughput capability of the NASA-300M can be attained by modifying the thruster's magnetic circuit. This led to modifying the NASA-300M magnetic topology to a magnetically shielded topology. This paper presents performance evaluation results of the two NASA-300M magnetically shielded thruster configurations, designated 300MS and 300MS-2. The 300MS and 300MS-2 were operated at power levels between 2.5 and 20 kW at discharge voltages between 200 and 700 V. Discharge channel deposition from back-sputtered facility wall flux, and plasma potential and electron temperature measurements made on the inner and outer discharge channel surfaces confirmed that magnetic shielding was achieved. Peak total thrust efficiency of 64% and total specific impulse of 3,050 sec were demonstrated with the 300MS-2 at 20 kW. Thermal characterization results indicate that the boron nitride discharge chamber walls temperatures are approximately 100 C lower for the 300MS when compared to the NASA- 300M at the same thruster operating discharge power.

  19. Linear response and Berry curvature in two-dimensional topological phases

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Bradlyn, Barry J.

    In this thesis we examine the viscous and thermal transport properties of chiral topological phases, and their relationship to topological invariants. We start by developing a Kubo formalism for calculating the frequency dependent viscosity tensor of a general quantum system, both with and without a uniform external magnetic field. The importance of contact terms is emphasized. We apply this formalism to the study of integer and fractional quantum Hall states, as well as p + ip paired superfluids, and verify the relationship between the Hall viscosity and the mean orbital spin density. We also elucidate the connection between our Kubo formulas and prior adiabatic transport calculations of the Hall viscosity. Additionally, we derive a general relationship between the frequency dependent viscosity and conductivity tensors for Galilean-invariant systems. We comment on the implications of this relationship towards the measurement of Hall viscosity in solid-state systems. To address the question of thermal transport, we first review the standard Kubo formalism of Luttinger for computing thermoelectric coefficients. We apply this to the specific case of non-interacting electrons in the integer quantum Hall regime, paying careful attention to the roles of bulk and edge effects. In order to generalize our discussion to interacting systems, we construct a low-energy effective action for a two-dimensional non-relativistic topological phase of matter in a continuum, which completely describes all of its bulk thermoelectric and visco-elastic properties in the limit of low frequencies, long distances, and zero temperature, without assuming either Lorentz or Galilean invariance, by coupling the microscopic degrees of freedom to the background spacetime geometry. We derive the most general form of a local bulk induced action to first order in derivatives of the background fields, from which thermodynamic and transport properties can be obtained. We show that the gapped bulk cannot contribute to low-temperature thermoelectric transport other than the ordinary Hall conductivity; the other thermoelectric effects (if they occur) are thus purely edge effects. The stress response to time-dependent strains is given by the Hall viscosity, which is robust against perturbations and related to the spin current. Finally, we address the issue of calculating the topological central charge from bulk wavefunctions for a topological phase. Using the form of the topological terms in the induced action, we show that we can calculate the various coefficients of these terms as Berry curvatures associated to certain metric and electromagnetic vector potential perturbations. We carry out this computation explicitly for quantum Hall trial wavefunctions that can be represented as conformal blocks in a chiral conformal field theory (CFT). These calculations make use of the gauge and gravitational anomalies in the underlying chiral CFT.

  20. Room temperature quantum spin Hall insulators with a buckled square lattice.

    PubMed

    Luo, Wei; Xiang, Hongjun

    2015-05-13

    Two-dimensional (2D) topological insulators (TIs), also known as quantum spin Hall (QSH) insulators, are excellent candidates for coherent spin transport related applications because the edge states of 2D TIs are robust against nonmagnetic impurities since the only available backscattering channel is forbidden. Currently, most known 2D TIs are based on a hexagonal (specifically, honeycomb) lattice. Here, we propose that there exists the quantum spin Hall effect (QSHE) in a buckled square lattice. Through performing global structure optimization, we predict a new three-layer quasi-2D (Q2D) structure, which has the lowest energy among all structures with the thickness less than 6.0 Å for the BiF system. It is identified to be a Q2D TI with a large band gap (0.69 eV). The electronic states of the Q2D BiF system near the Fermi level are mainly contributed by the middle Bi square lattice, which are sandwiched by two inert BiF2 layers. This is beneficial since the interaction between a substrate and the Q2D material may not change the topological properties of the system, as we demonstrate in the case of the NaF substrate. Finally, we come up with a new tight-binding model for a two-orbital system with the buckled square lattice to explain the low-energy physics of the Q2D BiF material. Our study not only predicts a QSH insulator for realistic room temperature applications but also provides a new lattice system for engineering topological states such as quantum anomalous Hall effect.

  1. Low Temperature Hall Measurements of Neutron Irradiated Silicon Carbide

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2004-03-01

    23 7. Cleaning Supplies in Hood. Samples were...chemicals used in the chemical hood. Figure 7: Cleaning Supplies in Hood. Samples were cleaned prior to contact deposition Additionally, the quartz tube used

  2. Analysis of YBCO high temperature superconductor doped with silver nanoparticles and carbon nanotubes using Williamson-Hall and size-strain plot

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Dadras, Sedigheh; Davoudiniya, Masoumeh

    2018-05-01

    This paper sets out to investigate and compare the effects of Ag nanoparticles and carbon nanotubes (CNTs) doping on the mechanical properties of Y1Ba2Cu3O7-δ (YBCO) high temperature superconductor. For this purpose, the pure and doped YBCO samples were synthesized by sol-gel method. The microstructural analysis of the samples is performed using X-ray diffraction (XRD). The crystalline size, lattice strain and stress of the pure and doped YBCO samples were estimated by modified forms of Williamson-Hall analysis (W-H), namely, uniform deformation model (UDM), uniform deformation stress model (UDSM) and the size-strain plot method (SSP). These results show that the crystalline size, lattice strain and stress of the YBCO samples declined by Ag nanoparticles and CNTs doping.

  3. First- and second-order metal-insulator phase transitions and topological aspects of a Hubbard-Rashba system

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Marcelino, Edgar

    2017-05-01

    This paper considers a model consisting of a kinetic term, Rashba spin-orbit coupling and short-range Coulomb interaction at zero temperature. The Coulomb interaction is decoupled by a mean-field approximation in the spin channel using field theory methods. The results feature a first-order phase transition for any finite value of the chemical potential and quantum criticality for vanishing chemical potential. The Hall conductivity is also computed using the Kubo formula in a mean-field effective Hamiltonian. In the limit of infinite mass the kinetic term vanishes and all the phase transitions are of second order; in this case the spontaneous symmetry-breaking mechanism adds a ferromagnetic metallic phase to the system and features a zero-temperature quantization of the Hall conductivity in the insulating one.

  4. Topological Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev model

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Zhang, Pengfei; Zhai, Hui

    2018-05-01

    In this Rapid Communication, we construct a large-N exactly solvable model to study the interplay between interaction and topology, by connecting the Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev (SYK) model with constant hopping. The hopping forms a band structure that can exhibit both topologically trivial and nontrivial phases. Starting from a topologically trivial insulator with zero Hall conductance, we show that the interaction can drive a phase transition to a topologically nontrivial insulator with quantized nonzero Hall conductance, and a single gapless Dirac fermion emerges when the interaction is fine tuned to the critical point. The finite temperature effect is also considered, and we show that the topological phase with a stronger interaction is less stable against temperature. Our model provides a concrete example to illustrate the interacting topological phases and phase transitions, and can shed light on similar problems in physical systems.

  5. Scaling in Plateau-to-Plateau Transition: A Direct Connection of Quantum Hall Systems with the Anderson Localization Model

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Li, Wanli; Vicente, C. L.; Xia, J. S.; Pan, W.; Tsui, D. C.; Pfeiffer, L. N.; West, K. W.

    2009-05-01

    The quantum Hall-plateau transition was studied at temperatures down to 1 mK in a random alloy disordered high mobility two-dimensional electron gas. A perfect power-law scaling with κ=0.42 was observed from 1.2 K down to 12 mK. This perfect scaling terminates sharply at a saturation temperature of Ts˜10mK. The saturation is identified as a finite-size effect when the quantum phase coherence length (Lϕ∝T-p/2) reaches the sample size (W) of millimeter scale. From a size dependent study, Ts∝W-1 was observed and p=2 was obtained. The exponent of the localization length, determined directly from the measured κ and p, is ν=2.38, and the dynamic critical exponent z=1.

  6. Langmuir Probe Measurements Within the Discharge Channel of the 20-kW NASA-300M and NASA-300MS Hall Thrusters

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Shastry, Rohit; Huang, Wensheng; Haag, Thomas W.; Kamhawi, Hani

    2013-01-01

    NASA is presently developing a high-power, high-efficiency, long-lifetime Hall thruster for the Solar Electric Propulsion Technology Demonstration Mission. In support of this task, studies have been performed on the 20-kW NASA-300M Hall thruster to aid in the overall design process. The ability to incorporate magnetic shielding into a high-power Hall thruster was also investigated with the NASA- 300MS, a modified version of the NASA-300M. The inclusion of magnetic shielding would allow the thruster to push existing state-of-the-art technology in regards to service lifetime, one of the goals of the Technology Demonstration Mission. Langmuir probe measurements were taken within the discharge channels of both thrusters in order to characterize differences at higher power levels, as well as validate ongoing modeling efforts using the axisymmetric code Hall2De. Flush-mounted Langmuir probes were also used within the channel of the NASA-300MS to verify that magnetic shielding was successfully applied. Measurements taken from 300 V, 10 kW to 600 V, 20 kW have shown plasma potentials near anode potential and electron temperatures of 4 to 12 eV at the walls near the thruster exit plane of the NASA-300MS, verifying magnetic shielding and validating the design process at this power level. Channel centerline measurements on the NASA-300M from 300 V, 10 kW to 500 V, 20 kW show the electron temperature peak at approximately 0.1 to 0.2 channel lengths upstream of the exit plane, with magnitudes increasing with discharge voltage. The acceleration profiles appear to be centered about the exit plane with a width of approximately 0.3 to 0.4 channel lengths. Channel centerline measurements on the NASA-300MS were found to be more challenging due to additional probe heating. Ionization and acceleration zones appeared to move downstream on the NASA-300MS compared to the NASA-300M, as expected based on the shift in peak radial magnetic field. Additional measurements or alternative diagnostics will be needed to verify peak electron temperatures in the NASA-300MS and compare them with model predictions.

  7. Fully patterned p-channel SnO TFTs using transparent Al2O3 gate insulator and ITO as source and drain contacts

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Guzmán-Caballero, D. E.; Quevedo-López, M. A.; De la Cruz, W.; Ramírez-Bon, R.

    2018-03-01

    SnO p-type was used as active layer to fabricate thin film transistors (TFTs) through photolithography and dry etching processes. The SnO p-type thin films (25 nm) were deposited by DC reactive sputtering with variable oxygen (O2) flow rate to then be annealed in air at 250 ◦C. Al2O3 gate dielectric (15 nm) was deposited by atomic layer deposition. Hall measurements showed p-type carrier concentration (N h ) of around 1 × 1018 cm-3 and Hall mobilities (μ Hall) between 0.35 and 2.64 cm2 V-1 s-1, depending on the O2 flow rate during deposition. The hole transport was dominated by variable-range hopping conduction. A change in the preferred crystalline orientation in the SnO films from (101) to (110) was associated with the increase in μ Hall. In addition, Raman vibrational modes at 110 and 209 cm-1 of polycrystalline SnO films showed certain dependence with the grain orientation. The SnO-based TFTs showed p-type behavior with low threshold voltages (V T ) and low sub threshold swing (SS) in the range from 1.76 to 3.50 V and 1.63 to 3.24 V/dec., respectively. The TFTs mobilities in the saturation regime (μ sat) were in the range of 0.12 and 1.32 cm2 V-1 s-1. The current on/off ratio (I ON/I OFF) was in the order of 102, approximately. The large values of the interface trap density (D IT) contributed to the high I OFF and the low I ON/I OFF of the TFTs.

  8. Quantum Hall resistance standard in graphene devices under relaxed experimental conditions

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ribeiro-Palau, R.; Lafont, F.; Brun-Picard, J.; Kazazis, D.; Michon, A.; Cheynis, F.; Couturaud, O.; Consejo, C.; Jouault, B.; Poirier, W.; Schopfer, F.

    2015-11-01

    The quantum Hall effect provides a universal standard for electrical resistance that is theoretically based on only the Planck constant h and the electron charge e. Currently, this standard is implemented in GaAs/AlGaAs, but graphene's electronic properties have given hope for a more practical device. Here, we demonstrate that the experimental conditions necessary for the operation of devices made of high-quality graphene grown by chemical vapour deposition on silicon carbide can be extended and significantly relaxed compared with those for state-of-the-art GaAs/AlGaAs devices. In particular, the Hall resistance can be accurately quantized to within 1 × 10-9 over a 10 T wide range of magnetic flux density, down to 3.5 T, at a temperature of up to 10 K or with a current of up to 0.5 mA. This experimental simplification highlights the great potential of graphene in the development of user-friendly and versatile quantum standards that are compatible with broader industrial uses beyond those in national metrology institutes. Furthermore, the measured agreement of the quantized Hall resistance in graphene and GaAs/AlGaAs, with an ultimate uncertainty of 8.2 × 10-11, supports the universality of the quantum Hall effect. This also provides evidence of the relation of the quantized Hall resistance with h and e, which is crucial for the new Système International d'unités to be based on fixing such fundamental constants of nature.

  9. Nonlinear resistivity for magnetohydrodynamical models

    DOE PAGES

    Lingam, M.; Hirvijoki, E.; Pfefferlé, D.; ...

    2017-04-20

    A new formulation of the plasma resistivity that stems from the collisional momentum-transfer rate between electrons and ions is presented. The resistivity computed herein is shown to depend not only on the temperature and density but also on all other polynomial velocity-space moments of the distribution function, such as the pressure tensor and heat flux vector. The full expression for the collisional momentum-transfer rate is determined and is used to formulate the nonlinear anisotropic resistivity. The new formalism recovers the Spitzer resistivity, as well as the concept of thermal force if the heat flux is assumed to be proportional tomore » a temperature gradient. Furthermore, if the pressure tensor is related to viscous stress, the latter enters the expression for the resistivity. The relative importance of the nonlinear term(s) with respect to the well-established electron inertia and Hall terms is also examined. Lastly, the subtle implications of the nonlinear resistivity, and its dependence on the fluid variables, are discussed in the context of magnetized plasma environments and phenomena such as magnetic reconnection.« less

  10. DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Jedrecy, N., E-mail: jedrecy@insp.jussieu.fr; Hamieh, M.; Hebert, C.

    We show that the well-established universal scaling σ{sub xy}{sup AHE} ∼ σ{sub xx}{sup 1.6} between anomalous Hall and longitudinal conductivities in the low conductivity regime (σ{sub xx} < 10{sup 4} Ω{sup −1} cm{sup −1}) transforms into the scaling σ{sub xy}{sup AHE} ∼ σ{sub xx}{sup 2} at the onset of strong electron localization. The crossover between the two relations is observed in magnetite-derived Zn{sub x}Fe{sub 3-x}O{sub 4} thin films where an insulating/hopping regime follows a bad metal/hopping regime below the Verwey transition temperature T{sub v}. Our results demonstrate that electron localization effects come into play in the anomalous Hall effect (AHE)more » modifying significantly the scaling exponent. In addition, the thermal evolution of the anomalous Hall resistivity suggests the existence of spin polarons whose size would decrease below T{sub v}.« less

  11. Hollow Cathode Assembly Development for the HERMeS Hall Thruster

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Sarver-Verhey, Timothy R.; Kamhawi, Hani; Goebel, Dan M.; Polk, James E.; Peterson, Peter Y.; Robinson, Dale A.

    2016-01-01

    To support the operation of the HERMeS 12.5 kW Hall Thruster for NASA's Asteroid Redirect Robotic Mission, hollow cathodes using emitters based on barium oxide impregnate and lanthanum hexaboride are being evaluated through wear-testing, performance characterization, plasma modeling, and assessment of system implementation concerns. This paper will present the development approach used to assess the cathode emitter options. A 2,000-hour wear-test of development model barium-oxide-based (BaO) hollow cathode is being performed as part of the development plan. The cathode was operated with an anode that simulates the HERMeS hall thruster operating environment. Cathode discharge performance has been stable with the device accumulating 740 hours at the time of this report. Cathode operation (i.e. discharge voltage and orifice temperature) was repeatable during period variation of discharge current and flow rate. The details of the cathode assembly operation during the wear-test will be presented.

  12. Compact high-speed reciprocating probe system for measurements in a Hall thruster discharge and plume.

    PubMed

    Dannenmayer, K; Mazouffre, S

    2012-12-01

    A compact high-speed reciprocating probe system has been developed in order to perform measurements of the plasma parameters by means of electrostatic probes in the discharge and the plume of a Hall thruster. The system is based on a piezoelectric linear drive that can achieve a speed of up to 350 mm/s over a travel range of 90 mm. Due to the high velocity of the linear drive the probe can be rapidly moved in and out the measurement region in order to minimize perturbation of the thruster discharge due to sputtering of probe material. To demonstrate the impact of the new system, a heated emissive probe, installed on the high-speed translation stage, was used to measure the plasma potential and the electron temperature in the near-field plume of a low power Hall thruster.

  13. Interface engineering of quantum Hall effects in digital transition metal oxide heterostructures.

    PubMed

    Xiao, Di; Zhu, Wenguang; Ran, Ying; Nagaosa, Naoto; Okamoto, Satoshi

    2011-12-20

    Topological insulators are characterized by a non-trivial band topology driven by the spin-orbit coupling. To fully explore the fundamental science and application of topological insulators, material realization is indispensable. Here we predict, based on tight-binding modelling and first-principles calculations, that bilayers of perovskite-type transition-metal oxides grown along the [111] crystallographic axis are potential candidates for two-dimensional topological insulators. The topological band structure of these materials can be fine-tuned by changing dopant ions, substrates and external gate voltages. We predict that LaAuO(3) bilayers have a topologically non-trivial energy gap of about 0.15 eV, which is sufficiently large to realize the quantum spin Hall effect at room temperature. Intriguing phenomena, such as fractional quantum Hall effect, associated with the nearly flat topologically non-trivial bands found in e(g) systems are also discussed.

  14. Modeling an Iodine Hall Thruster Plume in the Iodine Satellite (ISAT)

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Choi, Maria

    2016-01-01

    An iodine-operated 200-W Hall thruster plume has been simulated using a hybrid-PIC model to predict the spacecraft surface-plume interaction for spacecraft integration purposes. For validation of the model, the plasma potential, electron temperature, ion current flux, and ion number density of xenon propellant were compared with available measurement data at the nominal operating condition. To simulate iodine plasma, various collision cross sections were found and used in the model. While time-varying atomic iodine species (i.e., I, I+, I2+) information is provided by HP Hall simulation at the discharge channel exit, the molecular iodine species (i.e., I2, I2+) are introduced as Maxwellian particles at the channel exit. Simulation results show that xenon and iodine plasma plumes appear to be very similar under the assumptions of the model. Assuming a sticking coefficient of unity, iodine deposition rate is estimated.

  15. Quasiparticle-mediated spin Hall effect in a superconductor.

    PubMed

    Wakamura, T; Akaike, H; Omori, Y; Niimi, Y; Takahashi, S; Fujimaki, A; Maekawa, S; Otani, Y

    2015-07-01

    In some materials the competition between superconductivity and magnetism brings about a variety of unique phenomena such as the coexistence of superconductivity and magnetism in heavy-fermion superconductors or spin-triplet supercurrent in ferromagnetic Josephson junctions. Recent observations of spin-charge separation in a lateral spin valve with a superconductor evidence that these remarkable properties are applicable to spintronics, although there are still few works exploring this possibility. Here, we report the experimental observation of the quasiparticle-mediated spin Hall effect in a superconductor, NbN. This compound exhibits the inverse spin Hall (ISH) effect even below the superconducting transition temperature. Surprisingly, the ISH signal increases by more than 2,000 times compared with that in the normal state with a decrease of the injected spin current. The effect disappears when the distance between the voltage probes becomes larger than the charge imbalance length, corroborating that the huge ISH signals measured are mediated by quasiparticles.

  16. The Predictability of Large-Scale, Short-Period Variability in the Philippine Sea and the Influence of Such Variability on Long-Range acoustic Propagation

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-03-31

    with the black line indicating an average of these travel times. Altimetry data from 2000- 2007 were used to obtain the predictions, hence the...Vol. 2), Venice, Italy, 21-25 September 2009, Hall, J., Harrison, D.E. & Stammer , D., Eds., ESA Publication WPP-306. Dushaw, B. D., P. F. Worcester

  17. Two-band analysis of hole mobility and Hall factor for heavily carbon-doped p-type GaAs

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kim, B. W.; Majerfeld, A.

    1996-02-01

    We solve a pair of Boltzmann transport equations based on an interacting two-isotropic-band model in a general way first to get transport parameters corresponding to the relaxation time. We present a simple method to calculate effective relaxation times, separately for each band, which compensate for the inherent deficiencies in using the relaxation time concept for polar optical-phonon scattering. Formulas for calculating momentum relaxation times in the two-band model are presented for all the major scattering mechanisms of p-type GaAs for simple, practical mobility calculations. In the newly proposed theoretical framework, first-principles calculations for the Hall mobility and Hall factor of p-type GaAs at room temperature are carried out with no adjustable parameters in order to obtain direct comparisons between the theory and recently available experimental results. In the calculations, the light-hole-band nonparabolicity is taken into account on the average by the use of energy-dependent effective mass obtained from the kṡp method and valence-band anisotropy is taken partly into account by the use the Wiley's overlap function.. The calculated Hall mobilities show a good agreement with our experimental data for carbon-doped p-GaAs samples in the range of degenerate hole densities. The calculated Hall factors show rH=1.25-1.75 over hole densities of 2×1017-1×1020 cm-3.

  18. Hall current effects in the Lewis magnetohydrodynamic generator

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Nichols, L. D.; Sovie, R. J.

    1972-01-01

    Data obtained in a magnetohydrodynamic generator are compared with theoretical values calculated by using the Dzung theory. The generator was operated with cesium-seeded argon as the working fluid. The gas temperature varied from 1800 to 2100 K, the gas pressure from 19 to 22 N/sq cm, the Mach number from 0.3 to 0.5, and the magnetic field strength from 0.2 to 1.6 T. The analysis indicates that there is incomplete seed vaporization and that Hall current shorting paths (through the working fluid to ground at both the entrance and exit of the channel) limit generator performance.

  19. Hall effects on MHD flow of heat generating/absorbing fluid through porous medium in a rotating parallel plate channel

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Swarnalathamma, B. V.; Krishna, M. Veera

    2017-07-01

    We studied heat transfer on MHD convective flow of viscous electrically conducting heat generating/absorbing fluid through porous medium in a rotating channel under uniform transverse magnetic field normal to the channel and taking Hall current. The flow is governed by the Brinkman's model. The diagnostic solutions for the velocity and temperature are obtained by perturbation technique and computationally discussed with respect to flow parameters through the graphs. The skin friction and Nusselt number are also evaluated and computationally discussed with reference to pertinent parameters in detail.

  20. Nontrivial interplay of strong disorder and interactions in quantum spin-Hall insulators doped with dilute magnetic impurities

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Zheng, Jun-Hui; Cazalilla, Miguel A.

    2018-06-01

    We investigate nonperturbatively the effect of a magnetic dopant impurity on the edge transport of a quantum spin Hall (QSH) insulator. We show that for a strongly coupled magnetic dopant located near the edge of a system, a pair of transmission antiresonances appear. When the chemical potential is on resonance, interaction effects broaden the antiresonance width with decreasing temperature, thus suppressing transport for both repulsive and moderately attractive interactions. Consequences for the recently observed QSH insulating phase of the 1 -T' of WTe2 are briefly discussed.

  1. Hall number across a van Hove singularity

    DOE PAGES

    Maharaj, Akash V.; Esterlis, Ilya; Zhang, Yi; ...

    2017-07-24

    In this paper, in the context of the relaxation time approximation to Boltzmann transport theory, we examine the behavior of the Hall number n H of a metal in the neighborhood of a Lifshitz transition from a closed Fermi surface to open sheets. We find a universal nonanalytic dependence of n H on the electron density in the high-field limit, but a nonsingular dependence at low fields. Finally, the existence of an assumed nematic transition produces a doping dependent n H similar to that observed in recent experiments in the high-temperature superconductor YBa 2Cu 3O 7-x.

  2. Experimental Investigations with a 5-kW-Class Laboratory Model Closed-Drifted Hall Thruster

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2001-01-01

    Hall thruster (CDT). The project was composed of the following segments: 1) a 5-kW-class CDT (P5) was built and characterized in terms of performance and plume divergence; 2) the molecular-beam mass spectrometer (MBMS) was used to measure the ion energy distribution finction and charge state throughout the PS plume; 3) laser-induced fluorescence was used to measure the ion velocity and temperature in the near-field plume; 4) a 35 GHz microwave interferometer was developed to measure plasma oscillations and electron density in the plume; and 5) the near-field and internal

  3. Competing Grain Boundary and Interior Deformation Mechanisms with Varying Sizes

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Zhang, Wei; Gao, Yanfei; Nieh, T. G.

    In typical coarse-grained alloys, the dominant plastic deformations are dislocation gliding or climbing, and material strengths can be tuned by dislocation interactions with grain boundaries, precipitates, solid solutions, and other defects. With the reduction of grain size, the increase of material strengths follows the classic Hall-Petch relationship up to nano-grained materials. Even at room temperatures, nano-grained materials exhibit strength softening, or called the inverse Hall-Petch effect, as grain boundary processes take over as the dominant deformation mechanisms. On the other hand, at elevated temperatures, grain boundary processes compete with grain interior deformation mechanisms over a wide range of the appliedmore » stress and grain sizes. This book chapter reviews and compares the rate equation model and the microstructure-based finite element simulations. The latter explicitly accounts for the grain boundary sliding, grain boundary diffusion and migration, as well as the grain interior dislocation creep. Therefore the explicit finite element method has clear advantages in problems where microstructural heterogeneities play a critical role, such as in the gradient microstructure in shot peening or weldment. Furthermore, combined with the Hall-Petch effect and its breakdown, the above competing processes help construct deformation mechanism maps by extending from the classic Frost-Ashby type to the ones with the dependence of grain size.« less

  4. Electron-Fluxon Approach to the Quantum Hall Effect

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Fujita, Shigeji; Morabito, David; Godoy, Salvador

    2001-04-01

    Experimental data by Willett et al.(R. Willett et al.), Phys. Rev. Lett. 59, 1776 (1987). show that the Hall resistivity ρ_xy at the extreme low temperatures has plateaus at fractional occupation ratios (2D electron density / fluxon density) ν with odd denominators, where the longitudinal resistivity ρ_xx (nearly) vanishes. The plateau heights are quantized in units of h/e^2. Each plateau is material- and shape-independent and indicates the stability of the superconducting state. The same data show that ρ_xy is linear in B at ν=1/2, where ρ_xx has a small dip, indicating a Fermi-liquid-like state with a different kind of stability. We develop a microscopic theory of the quantum Hall effect in analogy with the theory of the high temperature superconductivity, regarding the fluxon as a quantum particle with half spin and zero mass. Each Landau level, E=(N+1/2)hbar ω_0, ω_0=eB/m, has a great degeneracy. Exchange of a longitudinal phonon can generate an attractive transition between the degenerate states. The same exchange can also pair-create electron-fluxon composites, bosonic and fermionic depending on the number of fluxons. The model accounts for the energy gap at each plateau, ensuring the stability of the superconducting state.

  5. Magneto-transport properties of As-implanted highly oriented pyrolytic graphite

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    de Jesus, R. F.; Camargo, B. C.; da Silva, R. R.; Kopelevich, Y.; Behar, M.; Gusmão, M. A.; Pureur, P.

    2016-11-01

    We report on magneto-transport experiments in a high-quality sample of highly-oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG). Magneto-resistance and Hall resistivity measurements were carried out in magnetic inductions up to B = 9 T applied parallel to the c-axis at fixed temperatures between T=2 K and T=12 K. The sample was submitted to three subsequent irradiations with As ions. The implanted As contents were 2.5, 5 and 10 at% at the maximum of the distribution profile. Experiments were performed after each implantation stage. Shubnikov-de Haas (SdH) oscillations were observed in both the magneto-resistance and Hall-effect measurements. Analyses of these results with fast Fourier transform (FFT) lead to fundamental frequencies and effective masses for electrons and holes that are independent of the implantation fluences. The Hall resistivity at low temperatures shows a sign reversal as a function of the field in all implanted states. We interpret the obtained results with basis on a qualitative model that supposes the existence of an extrinsic hole density associated to the defect structure of our sample. We conclude that the As implantation does not produce a semiconductor-type doping in our HOPG sample. Instead, an increase in the extrinsic hole density is likely to occur as a consequence of disorder induced by implantation.

  6. Performance of a Cylindrical Hall-Effect Thruster Using Permanent Magnets

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Polzin, Kurt A.; Raitses, Y.; Merino, E.; Fisch, N. J.

    2009-01-01

    While annular Hall thrusters can operate at high efficiency at kW power levels, it is difficult to construct one that operates over a broad envelope from 1 kW down to 100 W while maintaining an efficiency of 45-55%. Scaling to low power while holding the main dimensionless parameters constant requires a decrease in the thruster channel size and an increase in the magnetic field strength. Increasing the magnetic field becomes technically challenging since the field can saturate the miniaturized inner components of the magnetic circuit and scaling down the magnetic circuit leaves very little room for magnetic pole pieces and heat shields. In addition, the central magnetic pole piece defining the interior wall of the annular channel can experience excessive heat loads in a miniaturized Hall thruster, with the temperature eventually exceeding the Curie temperature of the material and in extreme circumstances leading to accelerated erosion of the channel wall. An alternative approach is to employ a cylindrical Hall thruster (CHT) geometry. Laboratory model CHTs have operated at power levels ranging from 50 W up to 1 kW. These thrusters exhibit performance characteristics that are comparable to conventional, annular Hall thrusters of similar size. Compared to the annular Hall thruster, the CHTs insulator surface area to discharge chamber volume ratio is lower. Consequently, there is the potential for reduced wall losses in the channel of a CHT, and any reduction in wall losses should translate into lower channel heating rates and reduced erosion, making the CHT geometry promising for low-power applications. This potential for high performance in the low-power regime has served as the impetus for research and development efforts aimed at understanding and improving CHT performance. Recently, a 2.6 cm channel diameter permanent magnet CHT (shown in Fig. 1) was tested. This thruster has the promise of reduced power consumption over previous CHT iterations that employed electromagnets. Data are presented to expose the effect different controllable parameters have on the discharge and to summarize performance measurements (thrust, Isp, efficiency) obtained using a thrust stand. In addition, beam current data are presented to show the effect of the magnetic field topology on the plume profile and current utilization and to gain insight into the thruster s operation. These data extend and improve upon the results previously presented by the authors in Ref. [1].

  7. Magnetotransport of Monolayer Graphene with Inert Gas Adsorption in the Quantum Hall Regime

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Fukuda, A.; Terasawa, D.; Fujimoto, A.; Kanai, Y.; Matsumoto, K.

    2018-03-01

    The surface of graphene is easily accessible from outside, and thus it is a suitable material to study the effects of molecular adsorption on the electric transport properties. We investigate the magnetotransport of inert-gas-adsorbed monolayer graphene at a temperature of 4.4 K under a magnetic field ranging from 0 to 7 T. We introduce 4He or Ar gas at low temperature to graphene kept inside a sample cell. The magnetoresistance change ΔRxx and Hall resistance change ΔRxy from the pristine graphene are measured as a function of gate voltage and magnetic field for one layer of adsorbates. ΔRxx and ΔRxy show oscillating patterns related to the constant filling factor lines in a Landau-fan diagram. Magnitudes of these quantities are relatively higher around a charge neutral point and may be mass-sensitive. These conditions could be optimized for development of a highly sensitive gas sensor.

  8. Equilibration of quantum hall edge states and its conductance fluctuations in graphene p-n junctions

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kumar, Chandan; Kuiri, Manabendra; Das, Anindya

    2018-02-01

    We report an observation of conductance fluctuations (CFs) in the bipolar regime of quantum hall (QH) plateaus in graphene (p-n-p/n-p-n) devices. The CFs in the bipolar regime are shown to decrease with increasing bias and temperature. At high temperature (above 7 K) the CFs vanishes completely and the flat quantized plateaus are recovered in the bipolar regime. The values of QH plateaus are in theoretical agreement based on full equilibration of chiral channels at the p-n junction. The amplitude of CFs for different filling factors follows a trend predicted by the random matrix theory. Although, there are mismatch in the values of CFs between the experiment and theory but at higher filling factors the experimental values become closer to the theoretical prediction. The suppression of CFs and its dependence has been understood in terms of time dependent disorders present at the p-n junctions.

  9. Design and Characterization of a Three-Axis Hall Effect-Based Soft Skin Sensor

    PubMed Central

    Tomo, Tito Pradhono; Somlor, Sophon; Schmitz, Alexander; Jamone, Lorenzo; Huang, Weijie; Kristanto, Harris; Sugano, Shigeki

    2016-01-01

    This paper presents an easy means to produce a 3-axis Hall effect–based skin sensor for robotic applications. It uses an off-the-shelf chip and is physically small and provides digital output. Furthermore, the sensor has a soft exterior for safe interactions with the environment; in particular it uses soft silicone with about an 8 mm thickness. Tests were performed to evaluate the drift due to temperature changes, and a compensation using the integral temperature sensor was implemented. Furthermore, the hysteresis and the crosstalk between the 3-axis measurements were evaluated. The sensor is able to detect minimal forces of about 1 gf. The sensor was calibrated and results with total forces up to 1450 gf in the normal and tangential directions of the sensor are presented. The test revealed that the sensor is able to measure the different components of the force vector. PMID:27070604

  10. Design and Characterization of a Three-Axis Hall Effect-Based Soft Skin Sensor.

    PubMed

    Tomo, Tito Pradhono; Somlor, Sophon; Schmitz, Alexander; Jamone, Lorenzo; Huang, Weijie; Kristanto, Harris; Sugano, Shigeki

    2016-04-07

    This paper presents an easy means to produce a 3-axis Hall effect-based skin sensor for robotic applications. It uses an off-the-shelf chip and is physically small and provides digital output. Furthermore, the sensor has a soft exterior for safe interactions with the environment; in particular it uses soft silicone with about an 8 mm thickness. Tests were performed to evaluate the drift due to temperature changes, and a compensation using the integral temperature sensor was implemented. Furthermore, the hysteresis and the crosstalk between the 3-axis measurements were evaluated. The sensor is able to detect minimal forces of about 1 gf. The sensor was calibrated and results with total forces up to 1450 gf in the normal and tangential directions of the sensor are presented. The test revealed that the sensor is able to measure the different components of the force vector.

  11. Stanene cyanide: a novel candidate of Quantum Spin Hall insulator at high temperature

    PubMed Central

    Ji, Wei-xiao; Zhang, Chang-wen; Ding, Meng; Li, Ping; Li, Feng; Ren, Miao-juan; Wang, Pei-ji; Hu, Shu-jun; Yan, Shi-shen

    2015-01-01

    The search for quantum spin Hall (QSH) insulators with high stability, large and tunable gap and topological robustness, is critical for their realistic application at high temperature. Using first-principle calculations, we predict the cyanogen saturated stanene SnCN as novel topological insulators material, with a bulk gap as large as 203 meV, which can be engineered by applying biaxial strain and electric field. The band topology is identified by Z2 topological invariant together with helical edge states, and the mechanism is s-pxy band inversion at G point induced by spin-orbit coupling (SOC). Remarkably, these systems have robust topology against chemical impurities, based on the calculations on halogen and cyano group co-decorated stanene SnXxX′1−x (X,X′  =  F, Cl, Br, I and CN), which makes it an appropriate and flexible candidate material for spintronic devices. PMID:26688269

  12. Thermally developed peristaltic propulsion of magnetic solid particles in biorheological fluids

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Bhatti, M. M.; Zeeshan, A.; Tripathi, D.; Ellahi, R.

    2018-04-01

    In this article, effects of heat and mass transfer on MHD peristaltic motion of solid particles in a dusty fluid are investigated. The effects of nonlinear thermal radiation and Hall current are also taken into account. The relevant flow analysis is modelled for fluid phase and dust phase in wave frame by means of Casson fluid model. Computation of solutions is presented for velocity profile, temperature profile and concentration profile. The effects of all the physical parameters such as particle volume fraction, Hartmann number, Hall Effect, Prandtl number, Eckert number, Schmidt number and Soret number are discussed mathematically and graphically. It is noted that the influence of magnetic field and particle volume fraction opposes the flow. Also, the impact of particle volume fraction is quite opposite on temperature and concentration profile. This model is applicable in smart drug delivery systems and bacteria movement in urine flow through the ureter.

  13. Use of CFD modelling for analysing air parameters in auditorium halls

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Cichowicz, Robert

    2017-11-01

    Modelling with the use of numerical methods is currently the most popular method of solving scientific as well as engineering problems. Thanks to the use of computer methods it is possible for example to comprehensively describe the conditions in a given room and to determine thermal comfort, which is a complex issue including subjective sensations of the persons in a given room. The article presents the results of measurements and numerical computing that enabled carrying out the assessment of environment parameters, taking into consideration microclimate, temperature comfort, speeds in the zone of human presence and dustiness in auditory halls. For this purpose measurements of temperature, relative humidity and dustiness were made with the use of a digital microclimate meter and a laser dust particles counter. Thanks to the above by using the application DesignBuilder numerical computing was performed and the obtained results enabled determining PMV comfort indicator in selected rooms.

  14. New type of quantum spin Hall insulators in hydrogenated PbSn thin films

    PubMed Central

    Liu, Liang; Qin, Hongwei; Hu, Jifan

    2017-01-01

    The realization of a quantum spin Hall (QSH) insulator working at high temperature is of both scientific and technical interest since it supports spin-polarized and dssipationless edge states. Based on first-principle calculations, we predicted that the two-dimensional (2D) binary compound of lead and tin (PbSn) in a buckled honeycomb framework can be tuned into a topological insulator with huge a band gap and structural stability via hydrogenation or growth on special substrates. This heavy-element-based structure is sufficiently ductile to survive the 18 ps molecular dynamics (MD) annealing to 400 K, and the band gap opened by strong spin-orbital-coupling (SOC) is as large as 0.7 eV. These characteristics indicate that hydrogenated PbSn (H-PbSn) is an excellent platform for QSH realization at high temperature. PMID:28218297

  15. Effect of the Low-Temperature Annealing on Zn-Doped Indium-Tin-Oxide Films for Silicon Heterojunction Solar Cells

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Lee, Seunghun; Lee, Jong-Han; Tark, Sung Ju; Choi, Suyoung; Kim, Chan Seok; Lee, Jeong Chul; Kim, Won Mok; Kim, Donghwan

    2012-10-01

    The effects of the low-temperature annealing on Zn-doped indium-tin-oxide (ITO) films such as the electrical, optical and structural properties were investigated. Zn-doped ITO films were fabricated by rf magnetron sputtering of ITO and Al-doped ZnO (AZO) targets on corning glass at room temperature. The content of Zn increased with increasing the power of AZO target. The carrier concentration of films shows the decreasing behaviour with increasing the content of Zn, due to a carrier compensation originating from the substitution of a doped Zn for an In or interstitial site. After the low-temperature annealing at 180 °C in vacuum, all films were slightly decreased a carrier concentration and increased the hall mobility because of the absorption of oxygen on the surface films. In addition, the average transmittance did not show a considerable change and had a high values over 80%. Especially, the Zn-doped ITO with atomic ratio of Zn/(In+Zn) of 6.8 at. % had the resistivity of 4×10-4 Ω cm, the highest hall mobility of 41 cm2 V-1 s-1, and the average transmittance of 82%.

  16. SO(8) fermion dynamical symmetry and strongly correlated quantum Hall states in monolayer graphene

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Wu, Lian-Ao; Murphy, Matthew; Guidry, Mike

    2017-03-01

    A formalism is presented for treating strongly correlated graphene quantum Hall states in terms of an SO(8) fermion dynamical symmetry that includes pairing as well as particle-hole generators. The graphene SO(8) algebra is isomorphic to an SO(8) algebra that has found broad application in nuclear physics, albeit with physically very different generators, and exhibits a strong formal similarity to SU(4) symmetries that have been proposed to describe high-temperature superconductors. The well-known SU(4) symmetry of quantum Hall ferromagnetism for single-layer graphene is recovered as one subgroup of SO(8), but the dynamical symmetry structure associated with the full set of SO(8) subgroup chains extends quantum Hall ferromagnetism and allows analytical many-body solutions for a rich set of collective states exhibiting spontaneously broken symmetry that may be important for the low-energy physics of graphene in strong magnetic fields. The SO(8) symmetry permits a natural definition of generalized coherent states that correspond to symmetry-constrained Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov solutions, or equivalently a microscopically derived Ginzburg-Landau formalism, exhibiting the interplay between competing spontaneously broken symmetries in determining the ground state.

  17. Strong Enhancement of the Spin Hall Effect by Spin Fluctuations near the Curie Point of FexPt1 -x Alloys

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ou, Yongxi; Ralph, D. C.; Buhrman, R. A.

    2018-03-01

    Robust spin Hall effects (SHE) have recently been observed in nonmagnetic heavy metal systems with strong spin-orbit interactions. These SHE are either attributed to an intrinsic band-structure effect or to extrinsic spin-dependent scattering from impurities, namely, side jump or skew scattering. Here we report on an extraordinarily strong spin Hall effect, attributable to spin fluctuations, in ferromagnetic FexPt1 -x alloys near their Curie point, tunable with x . This results in a dampinglike spin-orbit torque being exerted on an adjacent ferromagnetic layer that is strongly temperature dependent in this transition region, with a peak value that indicates a lower bound 0.34 ±0.02 for the peak spin Hall ratio within the FePt. We also observe a pronounced peak in the effective spin-mixing conductance of the FM /FePt interface, and determine the spin diffusion length in these FexPt1 -x alloys. These results establish new opportunities for fundamental studies of spin dynamics and transport in ferromagnetic systems with strong spin fluctuations, and a new pathway for efficiently generating strong spin currents for applications.

  18. Anomalous Hall effect in the van der Waals bonded ferromagnet Fe3 -xGeTe2

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Liu, Yu; Stavitski, Eli; Attenkofer, Klaus; Petrovic, C.

    2018-04-01

    We report the anomalous Hall effect (AHE) in single crystals of a quasi-two-dimensional Fe3 -xGeTe2 (x ≈0.36 ) ferromagnet grown by the flux method which induces defects on the Fe site and bad metallic resistivity. Fe K-edge x-ray absorption spectroscopy was measured to provide information on the local atomic environment in such crystals. The dc and ac magnetic susceptibility measurements indicate a second-stage transition below 119 K in addition to the paramagnetic to ferromagnetic transition at 153 K. A linear scaling behavior between the modified anomalous Hall resistivity ρx y/μ0Heff and longitudinal resistivity ρxx 2M /μ0Heff implies that the AHE in Fe3 -xGeTe2 should be dominated by the intrinsic Karplus-Luttinger mechanism rather than the extrinsic skew-scattering and side-jump mechanisms. The observed deviation in the linear-M Hall conductivity σxy A below 30 K is in line with its transport characteristic at low temperatures, implying the scattering of conduction electrons due to magnetic disorder and the evolution of the Fermi surface induced by a possible spin-reorientation transition.

  19. Thermal and electric properties of Nd(1.85)Ce(0.15)CuO(4-y) and Pr(1.85)Ce(0.15)CuO(4-y)

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Lim, Z. S.; Han, K. H.; Lee, Sung-Ik; Jeong, Yoon H.; Song, Y. S.; Park, Y. W.

    1990-01-01

    Electric resistivity, magnetic susceptibility, thermoelectric power, and Hall coefficient of Nd(1.85)Ce(0.15)CuO(4-y) and Pr(1.85)Ce(0.15)CuO(4-y) whose onset temperature of the superconductivity are 24 K and 23 K were measured. Experimental results show many interesting features. In particular, the Hall coefficients are negative and relatively flat as a function of temperature. However, the temperature dependence of the thermoelectric power (TEP) for these two samples shows the positive sign for both samples in contrast to the previous results. Moreover TEP for both samples remains flat in the normal state below 250 K, but decreases rapidly above 250 K. TEP of only Pr(1.85)Ce(0.15)CuO(4-y) shows a peak near 50 K. Finally onset temperatures of sudden drop of TEP are higher than those of resistance drop. The physical properties of these samples produced at different conditions such as different heat treatment temperatures, atmospheres were also measured. TEP and resistance measurement show that oxygen deficiency is essential to produce better superconducting samples. Correlation between TEP and superconductivity for these different samples will be discussed.

  20. Thermal and electric properties of Nd(1.85)Ce(0.15)CuO(4-y) and Pr(1.85)Ce(0.15)CuO(4-y)

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Lim, Z. S.; Han, K. H.; Lee, Sung-Ik; Jeong, Yoon H.; Song, Y. S.; Park, Y. W.

    1991-01-01

    Electric resistivity, magnetic susceptibility, thermoelectric power, and Hall coefficient of Nd(1.85)Ce(0.15)CuO(4-y) and Pr(1.85)Ce(0.15)CuO(4-y) whose onset temperature of the superconductivity are 24 and 23 K were measured. Experimental results show many interesting features. In particular, the Hall coefficients are negative and relatively flat as a function of temperature. However, the temperature dependence of the thermoelectric power (TEP) for these two samples shows the positive sign for both samples in contrast to the previous results. Moreover, TEP for both samples remains flat in the normal state below 250 K, but decreases rapidly above 250 K. TEP of only Pr(1.85)Ce(0.15)CuO(4-y) shows a peak near 50 K. Finally, onset temperatures of sudden drop of TEP are higher than those of resistance drop. The physical properties of these samples produced at different conditions such as different heat treatment temperatures, atmospheres were also measured. TEP and resistance measurement show that oxygen deficiency is essential to produce better superconducting samples. Correlation between TEP and superconductivity for these different samples are discussed.

  1. The cultural psychology endeavor to make culture central to psychology: Comment on Hall et al. (2016).

    PubMed

    Dvorakova, Antonie

    2016-12-01

    When Hall, Yip, and Zárate (2016) suggested that cultural psychology focused on reporting differences between groups, they described comparative research conducted in other fields, including cross-cultural psychology. Cultural psychology is a different discipline with methodological approaches reflecting its dissimilar goal, which is to highlight the cultural grounding of human psychological characteristics, and ultimately make culture central to psychology in general. When multicultural psychology considers, according to Hall et al., the mechanisms of culture's influence on behavior, it treats culture the same way as cross-cultural psychology does. In contrast, cultural psychology goes beyond treating culture as an external variable when it proposes that culture and psyche are mutually constitutive. True psychology of the human experience must encompass world populations through research of the ways in which (a) historically grounded sociocultural contexts enable the distinct meaning systems that people construct, and (b) these systems simultaneously guide the human formation of the environments. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved).

  2. Valence Band Structure of Highly Efficient p-type Thermoelectric PbTe-PbS Alloys

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Jaworski, C. M.; Nielsen, Mechele; Wang, Hsin

    New experimental evidence is given relevant to the temperature-dependence of valence band structure of PbTe and PbTe1-xSx alloys (0.04 x 0.12), and its effect on the thermoelectric figure of merit zT. The x = 0.08 sample has zT ~ 1.55 at 773K. The magnetic field dependence of the high-temperature Hall resistivity of heavily p-type (> 1019 cm-3) Na-doped PbTe1-xSx reveals the presence of high-mobility electrons. This put in question prior analyses of the Hall coefficient and the conclusion that PbTe would be an indirect gap semiconductor at temperatures where its zT is optimal. Possible origins for these electrons are discussed:more » they can be induced by photoconductivity, or by the topology of the Fermi surface when the L and -bands merge. Negative values for the low-temperature thermopower are also observed. Our data show that PbTe continues to be a direct gap semiconductor at temperatures where the zT and S2 of p-type PbTe are optimal e.g. 700-900K. The previously suggested temperature induced rapid rise in energy of the heavy hole LVB relative to the light hole UVB is not supported by the experimental data.« less

  3. Effects of Rapid Thermal Annealing on the Structural, Electrical, and Optical Properties of Zr-Doped ZnO Thin Films Grown by Atomic Layer Deposition.

    PubMed

    Wu, Jingjin; Zhao, Yinchao; Zhao, Ce Zhou; Yang, Li; Lu, Qifeng; Zhang, Qian; Smith, Jeremy; Zhao, Yongming

    2016-08-13

    The 4 at. % zirconium-doped zinc oxide (ZnO:Zr) films grown by atomic layer deposition (ALD) were annealed at various temperatures ranging from 350 to 950 °C. The structural, electrical, and optical properties of rapid thermal annealing (RTA) treated ZnO:Zr films have been evaluated to find out the stability limit. It was found that the grain size increased at 350 °C and decreased between 350 and 850 °C, while creeping up again at 850 °C. UV-vis characterization shows that the optical band gap shifts towards larger wavelengths. The Hall measurement shows that the resistivity almost keeps constant at low annealing temperatures, and increases rapidly after treatment at 750 °C due to the effect of both the carrier concentration and the Hall mobility. The best annealing temperature is found in the range of 350-550 °C. The ZnO:Zr film-coated glass substrates show good optical and electrical performance up to 550 °C during superstrate thin film solar cell deposition.

  4. Effects of Rapid Thermal Annealing on the Structural, Electrical, and Optical Properties of Zr-Doped ZnO Thin Films Grown by Atomic Layer Deposition

    PubMed Central

    Wu, Jingjin; Zhao, Yinchao; Zhao, Ce Zhou; Yang, Li; Lu, Qifeng; Zhang, Qian; Smith, Jeremy; Zhao, Yongming

    2016-01-01

    The 4 at. % zirconium-doped zinc oxide (ZnO:Zr) films grown by atomic layer deposition (ALD) were annealed at various temperatures ranging from 350 to 950 °C. The structural, electrical, and optical properties of rapid thermal annealing (RTA) treated ZnO:Zr films have been evaluated to find out the stability limit. It was found that the grain size increased at 350 °C and decreased between 350 and 850 °C, while creeping up again at 850 °C. UV–vis characterization shows that the optical band gap shifts towards larger wavelengths. The Hall measurement shows that the resistivity almost keeps constant at low annealing temperatures, and increases rapidly after treatment at 750 °C due to the effect of both the carrier concentration and the Hall mobility. The best annealing temperature is found in the range of 350–550 °C. The ZnO:Zr film-coated glass substrates show good optical and electrical performance up to 550 °C during superstrate thin film solar cell deposition. PMID:28773816

  5. Singularity in the positive Hall coeffcient near pre-onset temperatures in high-Tc superconductors

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Vezzoli, G. C.; Chen, M. F.; Craver, F.; Moon, B. M.; Safari, A.; Burke, T.; Stanley, W.

    1990-10-01

    Hall measurements using continuous extremely slow cooling and reheating rates as well as employing eqiulibrium point-by-point conventional techniques reveals a clear anomally in RH at pre-onset temperatures near Tc in polycrystalline samples Y1Ba2Cu3O7 and Bi2Sr2Ca2Cu3O10. The anomaly has the appearance of a singularity of Dirac-delta function which parallels earlier work on La1-xSrxCuO4. Recent single crystal work on the Bi-containing high-Tc superconductor is in accord with a clearcut anomaly. The singularity is tentatively interpreted to be associated (upon cooling) with initially the removal of positive holes from the hopping conduction system of the normal state such as from the increased concentration of bound virtual excitons due to increased exciton and hole lifetimes at low temperature. Subsequently the formation of Cooper pairs by mediation from these centers (bound-holes) and/or bound excitons) may cause an ionization of these bound virtual excitons thereby re-introducing holes and electrons into the conduction system at Tc.

  6. Anomalous Transport Properties via the Competition between the RKKY Interaction and the Kondo Effect in CexLa1-xRu2Si2

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Shimizu, Yasunobu; Matsumoto, Yuji; Aoki, Kosuke; Kimura, Noriaki; Aoki, Haruyoshi

    2012-04-01

    We have performed an extensive study on the electronic transport properties of CexLa1-xRu2Si2. At zero field or under the fields parallel to the hard axis of magnetization, the residual resistivity, magnetoresistivity and Hall resistivity are found to be most enhanced around x = 0.85 in the antiferromagnetic state. On the other hand, the high magnetic field along the easy axis is effective to suppress the enhancement. The coherence temperature derived from the temperature variation of Hall coefficient becomes equal to the antiferromagnetic transition temperature at x = 0.85, indicating that the competition between the coherence of the Kondo singlet and the long range magnetic order is responsible for the enhancement. The competition is likely to affect also the magnetic properties in the antiferromagnetic state. The comparison with the de Haas--van Alphen effect measurements suggests that the enhancement is likely to be due to the increase in scattering. The present results are compared with the theory by Hattori and Miyake.

  7. Hall and transverse even effects in the vicinity of a quantum critical point in Tm{sub 1-x}Yb{sub x}B{sub 12}

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Sluchanko, N. E., E-mail: nes@lt.gpi.ru; Azarevich, A. N.; Bogach, A. V.

    2012-09-15

    The angular, temperature, and magnetic field dependences of the resistance recorded in the Hall effect geometry are studied for the rare-earth dodecaboride Tm{sub 1-x}Yb{sub x}B{sub 12} solid solutions where the metal-insulator and antiferromagnetic-paramagnetic phase transitions are observed in the vicinity of the quantum critical point x{sub c} Almost-Equal-To 0.3. The measurements performed on high-quality single crystals in the temperature range 1.9-300 K for the first time have revealed the appearance of the second harmonic contribution, a transverse even effect in these fcc compounds near the quantum critical point. This contribution a is found to increase drastically both under the Tm-to-ytterbiummore » substitution in the range x > x{sub c} and with an increase in the external magnetic field. Moreover, as the Yb concentration x increases, a negative peak of a significant amplitude appears on the temperature dependences of the Hall coefficient R{sub H}(T) for the Tm{sup 1-x}Yb{sub x}B{sub 12} compounds, in contrast to the invariable behavior R{sub H}(T) Almost-Equal-To const found for TmB{sub 12}. The complicated activation-type behavior of the Hall coefficient is observed at intermediate temperatures for x {>=} 0.5 with activation energies E{sub g}/k{sub B} Almost-Equal-To 200 K and E{sub a}/k{sub B} 55-75 K, and the sign inversion of R{sub H}(T) is detected at liquid-helium temperatures in the coherent regime. Renormalization effects in the electron density of states induced by variation of the Yb concentration are analyzed. The anomalies of the charge transport in Tm{sub 1-x}Yb{sub x}B{sub 12} solid solutions in various regimes (charge gap formation, intra-gap many-body resonance, and coherent regime) are discussed in detail and the results are interpreted in terms of the electron phase separation effects in combination with the formation of nanosize clusters of rare earth ions in the cage-glass state of the studied dodecaborides. The data obtained allow concluding that the emergence of Yb-Yb dimers in the Tm{sub 1-x}Yb{sub x}B{sub 12} cage-glass matrix is the origin of the metal-insulator transition observed in the achetypal strongly correlated electron system of YbB{sub 12}.« less

  8. Hybrid Physical-Chemical Vapor Deposition of Bi2Se3 Thin films on Sapphire

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Brom, Joseph; Ke, Yue; Du, Renzhong; Gagnon, Jarod; Li, Qi; Redwing, Joan

    2012-02-01

    High quality thin films of topological insulators continue to garner much interest. We report on the growth of highly-oriented thin films of Bi2Se3 on c-plane sapphire using hybrid physical-chemical vapor deposition (HPCVD). The HPCVD process utilizes the thermal decomposition of trimethyl bismuth (TMBi) and evaporation of elemental selenium in a hydrogen ambient to deposit Bi2Se3. Growth parameters including TMBi flow rate and decomposition temperature and selenium evaporation temperature were optimized, effectively changing the Bi:Se ratio, to produce high quality films. Glancing angle x- ray diffraction measurements revealed that the films were c-axis oriented on sapphire. Trigonal crystal planes were observed in atomic force microscopy images with an RMS surface roughness of 1.24 nm over an area of 2μmx2μm. Variable temperature Hall effect measurements were also carried out on films that were nominally 50-70 nm thick. Over the temperature range from 300K down to 4.2K, the carrier concentration remained constant at approximately 6x10^18 cm-3 while the mobility increased from 480 cm^2/Vs to 900 cm^2/Vs. These results demonstrate that the HPCVD technique can be used to deposit Bi2Se3 films with structural and electrical properties comparable to films produced by molecular beam epitaxy.

  9. Traveling waves in Hall-magnetohydrodynamics and the ion-acoustic shock structure

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Hagstrom, George I.; Hameiri, Eliezer

    Hall-magnetohydrodynamics (HMHD) is a mixed hyperbolic-parabolic partial differential equation that describes the dynamics of an ideal two fluid plasma with massless electrons. We study the only shock wave family that exists in this system (the other discontinuities being contact discontinuities and not shocks). We study planar traveling wave solutions and we find solutions with discontinuities in the hydrodynamic variables, which arise due to the presence of real characteristics in Hall-MHD. We introduce a small viscosity into the equations and use the method of matched asymptotic expansions to show that solutions with a discontinuity satisfying the Rankine-Hugoniot conditions and also anmore » entropy condition have continuous shock structures. The lowest order inner equations reduce to the compressible Navier-Stokes equations, plus an equation which implies the constancy of the magnetic field inside the shock structure. We are able to show that the current is discontinuous across the shock, even as the magnetic field is continuous, and that the lowest order outer equations, which are the equations for traveling waves in inviscid Hall-MHD, are exactly integrable. We show that the inner and outer solutions match, which allows us to construct a family of uniformly valid continuous composite solutions that become discontinuous when the diffusivity vanishes.« less

  10. Dyon proliferation in interacting quantum spin Hall edges

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Lee, Shu-Ping; Maciejko, Joseph

    We show that a quantum spin Hall system with intra-edge multiparticle backscattering and inter-edge exchange interactions exhibits a modular invariant zero-temperature phase diagram. We establish this through mapping to a classical 2D Coulomb gas with electrically and magnetically charged particles; strong coupling phases in the quantum edge problem correspond to the proliferation of various dyons in the Coulomb gas. Distinct dyon proliferated phases can be accessed by tuning the edge Luttinger parameters, for example using a split gate geometry. This research was supported by NSERC Grant #RGPIN-2014-4608, the Canada Research Chair Program (CRC) and the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR).

  11. Correction to the paper “a simple model to determine the interrelation between the integral characteristics of hall thrusters” [Plasma Physics Reports 40, 229 (2014)

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Shumilin, V. P.; Shumilin, A. V.; Shumilin, N. V., E-mail: vladimirshumilin@yahoo.com

    2015-11-15

    The paper is devoted to comparison of experimental data with theoretical predictions concerning the dependence of the current of accelerated ions on the operating voltage of a Hall thruster with an anode layer. The error made in the paper published by the authors in Plasma Phys. Rep. 40, 229 (2014) occurred because of a misprint in the Encyclopedia of Low-Temperature Plasma. In the present paper, this error is corrected. It is shown that the simple model proposed in the above-mentioned paper is in qualitative and quantitative agreement with experimental results.

  12. Influence of Hall Current and Viscous Dissipation on Pressure Driven Flow of Pseudoplastic Fluid with Heat Generation: A Mathematical Study.

    PubMed

    Noreen, Saima; Qasim, Muhammad

    2015-01-01

    In this paper, we study the influence of heat sink (or source) on the peristaltic motion of pseudoplastic fluid in the presence of Hall current, where channel walls are non-conducting in nature. Flow analysis has been carried out under the approximations of a low Reynolds number and long wavelength. Coupled equations are solved using shooting method for numerical solution for the axial velocity function, temperature and pressure gradient distributions. We analyze the influence of various interesting parameters on flow quantities. The present study can be considered as a mathematical presentation of the dynamics of physiological organs with stones.

  13. Thermoelectric Properties of Lanthanum Sulfide

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Wood, C.; Lockwood, R.; Parker, J. B.; Zoltan, A.; Zoltan, L. D.; Danielson, L.; Raag, V.

    1987-01-01

    Report describes measurement of Seebeck coefficient, electrical resistivity, thermal conductivity, and Hall effect in gamma-phase lanthanum sulfide with composition of La3-x S4. Results of study, part of search for high-temperature thermoelectric energy-conversion materials, indicate this sulfide behaves like extrinsic semiconductor over temperature range of 300 to 1,400 K, with degenerate carrier concentration controlled by stoichiometric ratio of La to S.

  14. Breakdown of the independent electron picture in mesoscopic samples at low temperatures: The hunt for the Unicorn

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Webb, R. A.

    1998-03-01

    A variety of experiments are discussed where, at low temperatures, it appears that the non-interacting picture of electrons in a Fermi liquid description of a mesoscopic sample is breaking down. Specifically, experiments on the temperature dependence of the phase-coherence time, energy relaxation rate, spin-flip scattering time, persistent currents in normal metals and transmission through a barrier in the fractional quantum Hall regime all display low-temperature properties which can not be accounted for in the independent electron picture.

  15. a Permanent Magnet Hall Thruster for Satellite Orbit Maneuvering with Low Power

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ferreira, Jose Leonardo

    Plasma thrusters are known to have some advantages like high specific impulse. Electric propulsion is already recognized as a successful technology for long duration space missions. It has been used as primary propulsion system on earth-moon orbit trnsfer missions, comets and asteroids exploration and on commercially geosyncronous satellite attitude control systems. Closed Drift Plasma Thrusters, also called Hall Thrusters or SPT (Stationary Plasma Thruster) was conceived inthe USSR and, since then, they have been developed in several countries such as France, USA, Japan and Brazil. In this work, introductory remarks are made with focus on the most significant contributions of the electric propulsion to the progress of space missions and its future role on the brazillian space program. The main features of an inedit Permanent Magnet Hall Thruster (PMHT) developed at the Plasma Laboratory of the University of Brasilia is presented. The idea of using an array of permanent magnets, instead of an eletromagnet, to produce a radial magnetic field inside the cylindrical plasma drift channel of the thruster is a very important improvement, because it allows the possibility of developing a Hall Thruster with electric power consumption low enough to be used in small and medium size satellites. The new Halĺplasma source characterization is presented with plasma density, temperature and potential space profiles. Ion temperature mesurements based on Doppler broadening of spectral lines and ion energy measurements of the ejected plasma plume are also shown. Based on the mesured parameters of the accelerated plasma we constructed a merit figure for the PMHT. We also perform numerical simulations of satellite orbit raising from an altitude of 700 km to 36000 km using a PMHT operating in the 100 mN to 500 mN thrust range. In order to perform these caculations, integration techniques of spacecraft trajectory were used. The main simulation parameters were: orbit raising time, propellant mass, total satellite mass, thrust, specific impulse and exaust velocity. We conclude comparing our results with results obtained in Hall Thrusters whose magnetic fields are produced by eletromagnets.

  16. Reconstruction de la surface de Fermi dans l'etat normal d'un supraconducteur a haute Tc: Une etude du transport electrique en champ magnetique intense

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Le Boeuf, David

    Des mesures de resistance longitudinale et de resistance de Hall en champ magnetique intense transverse (perpendiculaire aux plans CuO2) ont ete effectuees au sein de monocristaux de YBa2Cu3Oy (YBCO) demacles, ordonnes et de grande purete, afin d'etudier l'etat fondamental des supraconducteurs a haute Tc dans le regime sous-dope. Cette etude a ete realisee en fonction du dopage et de l'orientation du courant d'excitation J par rapport a l'axe orthorhombique b de la structure cristalline. Les mesures en champ magnetique intense revelent par suppression de la supraconductivite des oscillations magnetiques des resistances longitudinale et de Hall dans YBa2Cu 3O6.51 et YBa2Cu4O8. La conformite du comportement de ces oscillations quantiques au formalisme de Lifshitz-Kosevich, apporte la preuve de l'existence d'une surface de Fermi fermee a caractere quasi-2D, abritant des quasiparticules coherentes respectant la statistique de Fermi-Dirac, dans la phase pseudogap d'YBCO. La faible frequence des oscillations quantiques, combinee avec l'etude de la partie monotone de la resistance de Hall en fonction de la temperature indique que la surface de Fermi d'YBCO sous-dope comprend une petite poche de Fermi occupee par des porteurs de charge negative. Cette particularite de la surface de Fermi dans le regime sous-dope incompatible avec les calculs de structure de bande est en fort contraste avec la structure electronique presente dans le regime surdope. Cette observation implique ainsi l'existence d'un point critique quantique dans le diagramme de phase d'YBCO, au voisinage duquel la surface de Fermi doit subir une reconstruction induite par l'etablissement d'une brisure de la symetrie de translation du reseau cristallin sous-jacent. Enfin, l'etude en fonction du dopage de la resistance de Hall et de la resistance longitudinale en champ magnetique intense suggere qu'un ordre du type onde de densite (DW) est responsable de la reconstruction de la surface de Fermi. L'analogie de la phenomenologie entourant le comportement des resistances longitudinale et de Hall dans YBa2Cu3Oy, avec des systemes dans lesquels l'existence d'un ordre du type DW est etablie, notamment des cuprates a structure tetragonale a basse temperature ("Low Temperature Tetragonal", LTT), indique que l'ordre causant la reconstruction de la surface de Fermi est stabilise au voisinage du dopage p = 1/8, et est en competition directe avec la supraconductivite.

  17. Low-temperature dependence of the thermomagnetic transport properties of the SrTiO3/LaAlO3 interface

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Lerer, S.; Ben Shalom, M.; Deutscher, G.; Dagan, Y.

    2011-08-01

    Transport measurements are reported, including Hall, Seebeck, and Nernst effects. All of these transport properties exhibit anomalous field and temperature dependencies, with a change of behavior observed at H˜1.5 T and T˜15 K. The low-temperature, low-field behaviors of all transport properties were reconciled using a simple two-band analysis. A more detailed model is required in order to explain the high-magnetic-field regime.

  18. Thermopower and the Fractional Quantized Hall Effect in the N=1 Landau Level

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Chickering, W. E.; Eisenstein, J. P.; Pfeiffer, L. N.; West, K. W.

    2012-02-01

    Having recently eliminated an issue involving long thermal time constants [1], we are now able to resolve diffusion thermopower deep into the fractional quantized Hall effect (FQHE) regime. In this talk we report measurements of thermopower in the first excited (N=1) Landau level as a continuous function of magnetic field down to temperatures as low as 30mK. Above 50mK we can clearly resolve the ν = 5/2 as well as ν = 7/3, 8/3, and 14/5 FQHEs in both the electrical and thermoelectrical transport. Below 50mK a prominent feature of the electrical transport in the first excited Landau level is the Re-entrant Integer Quantized Hall Effect (RIQHE) which is associated with insulating collective phases [2]. In this temperature regime the thermopower exhibits a series of intriguing sign reversals that are as yet not fully understood. We will conclude with a brief discussion of the connection between thermopower and the entropy of the 2D electron system. This connection is invoked by a recent prediction [3] of the thermopower at ν = 5/2, which assumes the ground state is the non-Abelian Moore-Read paired composite fermion state.[4pt] [1] Chickering, Phys. Rev. B 81, 245319 (2010)[0pt] [2] Eisenstein, Phys. Rev. Lett. 88, 076801 (2002)[0pt] [3] Yang, Phys. Rev. B 79, 115317 (2009)

  19. Extended Hall-Petch Relationships for Yield, Cleavage and Intergranular Fracture Strengths of bcc Steel and Its Deformation and Fracture Behaviors

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Heo, N. H.; Heo, Y.-U.; Kwon, S. K.; Kim, N. J.; Kim, S.-J.; Lee, H.-C.

    2018-03-01

    Extended Hall-Petch relationships for yield ( σy ), cleavage ( σ_{cl} ) and intergranular fracture ( σ_{ig} ) strengths of pure iron have been established through the direct calculation of the proportional constant (k) and the estimation of the friction stress (σ0 ) . The magnitude orders of k and σ0 are generally ky < k_{cl} < k_{ig} and σ_{y0} < σ_{cl0} < σ_{ig0} , respectively. Based on the Hall-Petch relationships, micro-yielding in a bcc steel occurs at the instance that the pile-up dislocations within a specific grain showing the Schmid factor of 0.5 propagate into the neighboring grain. The initial brittle crack is formed at the instance that the flow strength exceeds the brittle fracture strength. Once the brittle crack is formed, it grows catastrophically. Due to the smallest and ky and σ_{y0} , the cleavage and the intergranular fracture occur always after micro-yielding. The {100} cleavage fracture of the steel is due to the lowest theoretical {100} cleavage strength. Due to the thermal components included in cleavage and intergranular fracture strengths, they show also the temperature and strain rate dependence observed in yield strength. The increase in susceptibility to brittle fracture with decreasing temperature and increasing strain rate is due to the increase in dislocation density which causes the high work hardening rate.

  20. Quantum anomalous Hall phase and half-metallic phase in ferromagnetic (111) bilayers of 4 d and 5 d transition metal perovskites

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Chandra, Hirak Kumar; Guo, Guang-Yu

    2017-04-01

    Extraordinary electronic phases can form in artificial oxide heterostructures, which will provide a fertile ground for new physics and also give rise to novel device functions. Based on a systematic first-principles density functional theory study of the magnetic and electronic properties of the (111) superlattices (ABO3) 2/(AB'O3)10 of 4 d and 5 d transition metal perovskite (B = Ru, Rh, Ag, Re, Os, Ir, Au; AB'O3=LaAlO3 , SrTiO3) , we demonstrate that due to quantum confinement, bilayers (LaBO3)2 (B = Ru, Re, Os) and (SrBO3)2 (B = Rh, Os, Ir) are ferromagnetic with ordering temperatures up to room temperature. In particular, bilayer (LaOsO3)2 is an exotic spin-polarized quantum anomalous Hall insulator, while the other ferromagnetic bilayers are metallic with large Hall conductances comparable to the conductance quantum. Furthermore, bilayers (LaRuO3)2 and (SrRhO3)2 are half metallic, while the bilayer (SrIrO3)2 exhibits a peculiar colossal magnetic anisotropy. Our findings thus show that 4 d and 5 d metal perovskite (111) bilayers are a class of quasi-two-dimensional materials for exploring exotic quantum phases and also for advanced applications such as low-power nanoelectronics and oxide spintronics.

  1. Effect of Segmented Electrode Length on the Performances of an Aton-Type Hall Thruster

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Duan, Ping; Bian, Xingyu; Cao, Anning; Liu, Guangrui; Chen, Long; Yin, Yan

    2016-05-01

    The influences of the low-emissive graphite segmented electrode placed near the channel exit on the discharge characteristics of a Hall thruster are studied using the particle-in-cell method. A two-dimensional physical model is established according to the Hall thruster discharge channel configuration. The effects of electrode length on the potential, ion density, electron temperature, ionization rate and discharge current are investigated. It is found that, with the increasing of the segmented electrode length, the equipotential lines bend towards the channel exit, and approximately parallel to the wall at the channel surface, the radial velocity and radial flow of ions are increased, and the electron temperature is also enhanced. Due to the conductive characteristic of electrodes, the radial electric field and the axial electron conductivity near the wall are enhanced, and the probability of the electron-atom ionization is reduced, which leads to the degradation of the ionization rate in the discharge channel. However, the interaction between electrons and the wall enhances the near wall conductivity, therefore the discharge current grows along with the segmented electrode length, and the performance of the thruster is also affected. supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China (Nos. 11375039 and 11275034) and the Key Project of Science and Technology of Liaoning Province, China (No. 2011224007) and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities, China (No. 3132014328)

  2. XRD analysis of undoped and Fe doped TiO{sub 2} nanoparticles by Williamson Hall method

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Bharti, Bandna; Barman, P. B.; Kumar, Rajesh, E-mail: rajesh.kumar@juit.ac.in

    2015-08-28

    Undoped and Fe doped titanium dioxide (TiO{sub 2}) nanoparticles were synthesized by sol-gel method at room temperature. The synthesized samples were annealed at 500°C. For structural analysis, the prepared samples were characterized by X-ray diffraction (XRD). The crystallite size of TiO{sub 2} and Fe doped TiO{sub 2} nanoparticles were calculated by Scherer’s formula, and was found to be 15 nm and 11 nm, respectively. Reduction in crystallite size of TiO{sub 2} with Fe doping was observed. The anatase phase of Fe-doped TiO{sub 2} nanoparticles was also confirmed by X-ray diffraction. By using Williamson-Hall method, lattice strain and crystallite size weremore » also calculated. Williamson–Hall plot indicates the presence of compressive strain for TiO{sub 2} and tensile strain for Fe-TiO{sub 2} nanoparticles annealed at 500°C.« less

  3. General response formula and application to topological insulator in quantum open system.

    PubMed

    Shen, H Z; Qin, M; Shao, X Q; Yi, X X

    2015-11-01

    It is well-known that the quantum linear response theory is based on the first-order perturbation theory for a system in thermal equilibrium. Hence, this theory breaks down when the system is in a steady state far from thermal equilibrium and the response up to higher order in perturbation is not negligible. In this paper, we develop a nonlinear response theory for such quantum open system. We first formulate this theory in terms of general susceptibility, after which we apply it to the derivation of Hall conductance for open system at finite temperature. As an example, the Hall conductance of the two-band model is derived. Then we calculate the Hall conductance for a two-dimensional ferromagnetic electron gas and a two-dimensional lattice model. The calculations show that the transition points of topological phase are robust against the environment. Our results provide a promising platform for the coherent manipulation of the nonlinear response in quantum open system, which has potential applications for quantum information processing and statistical physics.

  4. Power Dependence of the Electron Mobility Profile in a Hall Thruster

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Jorns, Benjamin A.; Hofery, Richard H.; Mikellides, Ioannis G.

    2014-01-01

    The electron mobility profile is estimated in a 4.5 kW commercial Hall thruster as a function of discharge power. Internal measurements of plasma potential and electron temperature are made in the thruster channel with a high-speed translating probe. These measurements are presented for a range of throttling conditions from 150 - 400 V and 0.6 - 4.5 kW. The fluid-based solver, Hall2De, is used in conjunction with these internal plasma parameters to estimate the anomalous collision frequency profile at fixed voltage, 300 V, and three power levels. It is found that the anomalous collision frequency profile does not change significantly upstream of the location of the magnetic field peak but that the extent and magnitude of the anomalous collision frequency downstream of the magnetic peak does change with thruster power. These results are discussed in the context of developing phenomenological models for how the collision frequency profile depends on thruster operating conditions.

  5. Solar project description for Loyola University-Biever Hall men's dormitory, New Orleans, Louisiana

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Not Available

    1981-07-10

    The Loyola University solar energy system, located in New Orleans, Louisiana, preheats approximately 9000 gallons of domestic hot water (DHW) each day to Biever Hall Dormitory. Biever Hall is a six-story dormitory that houses 420 students. The system is designed to supply 140/sup 0/F water to bathrooms, showers, and eight washing machines. The solar energy system has 15 arrays of flat-plate collectors with a gross area of 4590 square feet. The system is an open loop system which uses potable water as both the collector fluid and storage medium. City water is preheated by flat plate collectors on the roofmore » and stored in a 5000 gallon tank located on the west side of the building at ground level. Upon demand the preheated water is transported to two existing 1500 gallon hot water tanks. Auxiliary energy is supplied by a central heating plant via a high temperature/high pressure line.« less

  6. Effects of GaN interlayer on the transport properties of lattice-matched AlInN/AlN/GaN heterostructures

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Wu, F.; Gao, K. H., E-mail: khgao@tju.edu.cn; Li, Z. Q.

    2015-04-21

    We study the effects of GaN interlayer on the transport properties of two-dimensional electron gases confined in lattice-matched AlInN/AlN/GaN heterostructures. It is found that the Hall mobility is evidently enhanced when an additional ultrathin GaN interlayer is introduced between AlInN and AlN layers. The enhancement of the Hall mobility is especially remarkable at low temperature. The high Hall mobility results in a low sheet resistance of 23 Ω/◻ at 2 K. Meanwhile, Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations (SdH) are also remarkably enhanced due to the existence of GaN interlayer. The enhancement of the SdH oscillations is related to the larger quantum mobility μ{sub q}more » owing to the suppression of the interface roughness, alloy disorder, and ionized impurity scatterings by the GaN interlayer.« less

  7. Development of a Computationally Efficient, High Fidelity, Finite Element Based Hall Thruster Model

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Jacobson, David (Technical Monitor); Roy, Subrata

    2004-01-01

    This report documents the development of a two dimensional finite element based numerical model for efficient characterization of the Hall thruster plasma dynamics in the framework of multi-fluid model. Effect of the ionization and the recombination has been included in the present model. Based on the experimental data, a third order polynomial in electron temperature is used to calculate the ionization rate. The neutral dynamics is included only through the neutral continuity equation in the presence of a uniform neutral flow. The electrons are modeled as magnetized and hot, whereas ions are assumed magnetized and cold. The dynamics of Hall thruster is also investigated in the presence of plasma-wall interaction. The plasma-wall interaction is a function of wall potential, which in turn is determined by the secondary electron emission and sputtering yield. The effect of secondary electron emission and sputter yield has been considered simultaneously, Simulation results are interpreted in the light of experimental observations and available numerical solutions in the literature.

  8. Computed versus measured ion velocity distribution functions in a Hall effect thruster

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Garrigues, L.; CNRS, LAPLACE, F-31062 Toulouse; Mazouffre, S.

    2012-06-01

    We compare time-averaged and time-varying measured and computed ion velocity distribution functions in a Hall effect thruster for typical operating conditions. The ion properties are measured by means of laser induced fluorescence spectroscopy. Simulations of the plasma properties are performed with a two-dimensional hybrid model. In the electron fluid description of the hybrid model, the anomalous transport responsible for the electron diffusion across the magnetic field barrier is deduced from the experimental profile of the time-averaged electric field. The use of a steady state anomalous mobility profile allows the hybrid model to capture some properties like the time-averaged ion meanmore » velocity. Yet, the model fails at reproducing the time evolution of the ion velocity. This fact reveals a complex underlying physics that necessitates to account for the electron dynamics over a short time-scale. This study also shows the necessity for electron temperature measurements. Moreover, the strength of the self-magnetic field due to the rotating Hall current is found negligible.« less

  9. Magneto hall effect on unsteady elastico-viscous nanofluid slip flow in a channel in presence of thermal radiation and heat generation with Brownian motion

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Karim, M. Enamul; Samad, M. Abdus; Ferdows, M.

    2017-06-01

    The present note investigates the magneto hall effect on unsteady flow of elastico-viscous nanofluid in a channel with slip boundary considering the presence of thermal radiation and heat generation with Brownian motion. Numerical results are achieved by solving the governing equations by the implicit Finite Difference Method (FDM) obtaining primary and secondary velocities, temperature, nanoparticles volume fraction and concentration distributions within the boundary layer entering into the problem. The influences of several interesting parameters such as elastico-viscous parameter, magnetic field, hall parameter, heat generation, thermal radiation and Brownian motion parameters on velocity, heat and mass transfer characteristics of the fluid flow are discussed with the help of graphs. Also the effects of the pertinent parameters, which are of physical and engineering interest, such as Skin friction parameter, Nusselt number and Sherwood number are sorted out. It is found that the flow field and other quantities of physical concern are significantly influenced by these parameters.

  10. Computational manipulation of a radiative MHD flow with Hall current and chemical reaction in the presence of rotating fluid

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Alias Suba, Subbu; Muthucumaraswamy, R.

    2018-04-01

    A numerical analysis of transient radiative MHD(MagnetoHydroDynamic) natural convective flow of a viscous, incompressible, electrically conducting and rotating fluid along a semi-infinite isothermal vertical plate is carried out taking into consideration Hall current, rotation and first order chemical reaction.The coupled non-linear partial differential equations are expressed in difference form using implicit finite difference scheme. The difference equations are then reduced to a system of linear algebraic equations with a tri-diagonal structure which is solved by Thomas Algorithm. The primary and secondary velocity profiles, temperature profile, concentration profile, skin friction, Nusselt number and Sherwood Number are depicted graphically for a range of values of rotation parameter, Hall parameter,magnetic parameter, chemical reaction parameter, radiation parameter, Prandtl number and Schmidt number.It is recognized that rate of heat transfer and rate of mass transfer decrease with increase in time but they increase with increasing values of radiation parameter and Schmidt number respectively.

  11. Optical probing of quantum Hall effect of composite fermions and of the liquid-insulator transition

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Rossella, F.; Bellani, V.; Dionigi, F.; Amado, M.; Diez, E.; Kowalik, K.; Biasiol, G.; Sorba, L.

    2011-12-01

    In the photoluminescence spectra of a two-dimensional electron gas in the fractional quantum Hall regime we observe the states at filling factors ν = 4/5, 5/7, 4/11 and 3/8 as clear minima in the intensity or area emission peak. The first three states are described as interacting composite fermions in fractional quantum Hall regime. The minimum in the intensity at ν = 3/8, which is not explained within this picture, can be an evidence of a suppression of the screening of the Coulomb interaction among the effective quasi-particles involved in this intriguing state. The magnetic field energy dispersion at very low temperatures is also discussed. At low field the emission follows a Landau dispersion with a screened magneto-Coulomb contribution. At intermediate fields the hidden symmetry manifests. At high field above ν = 1/3 the electrons correlate into an insulating phase, and the optical emission behaviour at the liquid-insulator transition is coherent with a charge ordering driven by Coulomb correlations.

  12. An Alternative Approach to the Variable Housing Allowance Program

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1987-01-01

    ACOL values. 1T CBO, p. 31. tm Angus Deaton and John Muellbauer, Economics and Consumer Behavior (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1980), p...London: Chapman and Hall, 1975. Deaton A. S. and J. Muellbauer. Economics and Consumer Behavior . New York« Cambridge University Press, 1980

  13. 77 FR 32081 - Marine Mammals; File No. 17236

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2012-05-31

    ... Robert A. Garrott, Ecology Department, Montana State University, 310 Lewis Hall, Bozeman, MT, 59717, has... evaluate how environmental variability and individual heterogeneity affects the population dynamics of... population in the Erebus Bay, McMurdo Sound, Ross Sea and White Island areas of Antarctica. Up to 425 adults...

  14. Measuring Thermoelectric Properties Automatically

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Chmielewski, A.; Wood, C.

    1986-01-01

    Microcomputer-controlled system speeds up measurements of Hall voltage, Seebeck coefficient, and thermal diffusivity in semiconductor compounds for thermoelectric-generator applications. With microcomputer system, large data base of these parameters gathered over wide temperature range. Microcomputer increases measurement accuracy, improves operator productivity, and reduces test time.

  15. A Network on Wheels!

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Harper, Christopher

    1994-01-01

    Describes mobile computer carts developed at the Lawrence Hall of Science that use IBM PS/2 computers and Personal Science Laboratory probeware. Activities using temperature probes for elementary and secondary school students are described, including greenhouse environments, ice cream/chemical reactions, probe races, motion studies, and…

  16. Anomalous Hall effect in the van der Waals bonded ferromagnet Fe 3 − x GeTe 2

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Liu, Yu; Stavitski, Eli; Attenkofer, Klaus

    2018-04-09

    Here, we report the anomalous Hall effect (AHE) in single crystals of a quasi-two-dimensional Fe 3–xGeTe 2 (x ≈ 0.36) ferromagnet grown by the flux method which induces defects on the Fe site and bad metallic resistivity. Fe K-edge x-ray absorption spectroscopy was measured to provide information on the local atomic environment in such crystals. The dc and ac magnetic susceptibility measurements indicate a second-stage transition below 119 K in addition to the paramagnetic to ferromagnetic transition at 153 K. A linear scaling behavior between the modified anomalous Hall resistivity ρxy/μ0Heff and longitudinal resistivity ρ 2 xxM/μ 0H eff impliesmore » that the AHE in Fe 3–xGeTe 2 should be dominated by the intrinsic Karplus-Luttinger mechanism rather than the extrinsic skew-scattering and side-jump mechanisms. The observed deviation in the linear- M Hall conductivity σ A xy below 30 K is in line with its transport characteristic at low temperatures, implying the scattering of conduction electrons due to magnetic disorder and the evolution of the Fermi surface induced by a possible spin-reorientation transition.« less

  17. Anomalous Hall effect in two-dimensional non-collinear antiferromagnetic semiconductor Cr0.68Se

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Yan, J.; Luo, X.; Chen, F. C.; Pei, Q. L.; Lin, G. T.; Han, Y. Y.; Hu, L.; Tong, P.; Song, W. H.; Zhu, X. B.; Sun, Y. P.

    2017-07-01

    Cr0.68Se single crystals with two-dimensional (2D) character have been grown, and the detailed magnetization M(T), electrical transport properties (including longitudinal resistivity ρxx and Hall resistivity ρxy), and thermal transport properties [including heat capacity Cp(T) and thermoelectric power S(T)] have been measured. There are some interesting phenomena: (i) Cr0.68Se presents a non-collinear antiferromagnetic (AFM) semiconducting behavior at the Néel temperature of TN = 42 K and with the activated energy of Eg = 3.9 meV; (ii) it exhibits the anomalous Hall effect (AHE) below TN and large negative magnetoresistance about 83.7% (2 K, 8.5 T). The AHE coefficient RS is 0.385 cm-3/C at T = 2 K, and the AHE conductivity σH is about 1 Ω-1 cm-1 at T = 40 K; (iii) the scaling behavior between the anomalous Hall resistivity ρxy A and the longitudinal resistivity ρxx is linear, and further analysis implies that the origin of the AHE in Cr0.68Se is dominated by the skew-scattering mechanism. Our results may be helpful for exploring the potential application of these kinds of 2D AFM semiconductors.

  18. Complex Terahertz and Direct Current Inverse Spin Hall Effect in YIG/Cu1-xIrx Bilayers Across a Wide Concentration Range.

    PubMed

    Cramer, Joel; Seifert, Tom; Kronenberg, Alexander; Fuhrmann, Felix; Jakob, Gerhard; Jourdan, Martin; Kampfrath, Tobias; Kläui, Mathias

    2018-02-14

    We measure the inverse spin Hall effect of Cu 1-x Ir x thin films on yttrium iron garnet over a wide range of Ir concentrations (0.05 ⩽ x ⩽ 0.7). Spin currents are triggered through the spin Seebeck effect, either by a continuous (dc) temperature gradient or by ultrafast optical heating of the metal layer. The spin Hall current is detected by electrical contacts or measurement of the emitted terahertz radiation. With both approaches, we reveal the same Ir concentration dependence that follows a novel complex, nonmonotonous behavior as compared to previous studies. For small Ir concentrations a signal minimum is observed, whereas a pronounced maximum appears near the equiatomic composition. We identify this behavior as originating from the interplay of different spin Hall mechanisms as well as a concentration-dependent variation of the integrated spin current density in Cu 1-x Ir x . The coinciding results obtained for dc and ultrafast stimuli provide further support that the spin Seebeck effect extends to terahertz frequencies, thus enabling a transfer of established spintronic measurement schemes into the terahertz regime. Our findings also show that the studied material allows for efficient spin-to-charge conversion even on ultrafast time scales.

  19. Interfacial scattering effect on anisotropic magnetoresistance and anomalous Hall effect in Ta/Fe multilayers

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Zhang, Qiang; Zhang, Junwei; Zhao, Yuelei; Wen, Yan; Li, Peng; Zhang, Senfu; He, Xin; Zhang, Junli; Zhang, Xixiang

    2018-05-01

    The effect of interfacial scattering on anisotropic magnetoresistance (AMR) and anomalous Hall effect (AHE) was studied in the (Ta12/n/Fe36/n) n multilayers, where the numbers give the thickness in nanometer and n is an integer from 1 to 12. The multilayer structure has been confirmed by the XRR spectra and STEM images of cross-sections. The magneto-transport properties were measured by four-point probe method in Hall bar shaped samples in the temperature range of 5 - 300 K. The AMR increases with n, which could be ascribed to the interfacial spin-orbit scattering. At 5 K, the longitudinal resistivity (ρxx) increases by 6.4 times and the anomalous Hall resistivity (ρAHE) increases by 49.4 times from n =1 to n =12, indicative of the interfacial scattering effect. The skew-scattering, side-jump and intrinsic contributions to the AHE were separated successfully. As n increases from 1 to 12, the intrinsic contribution decreases because of the decaying crystallinity or finite size effect and the intrinsic contribution dominated the AHE for all samples. The side jump changes from negative to positive because the interfacial scattering and intralayer scattering in Fe layers both contribute to side jump in the AHE but with opposite sign.

  20. Anomalous Hall effect in the van der Waals bonded ferromagnet Fe 3 - x GeTe 2

    DOE PAGES

    Liu, Yu; Stavitski, Eli; Attenkofer, Klaus; ...

    2018-04-09

    Here, we report the anomalous Hall effect (AHE) in single crystals of a quasi-two-dimensional Fe 3–xGeTe 2 (x ≈ 0.36) ferromagnet grown by the flux method which induces defects on the Fe site and bad metallic resistivity. Fe K-edge x-ray absorption spectroscopy was measured to provide information on the local atomic environment in such crystals. The dc and ac magnetic susceptibility measurements indicate a second-stage transition below 119 K in addition to the paramagnetic to ferromagnetic transition at 153 K. A linear scaling behavior between the modified anomalous Hall resistivity ρxy/μ0Heff and longitudinal resistivity ρ 2 xxM/μ 0H eff impliesmore » that the AHE in Fe 3–xGeTe 2 should be dominated by the intrinsic Karplus-Luttinger mechanism rather than the extrinsic skew-scattering and side-jump mechanisms. The observed deviation in the linear- M Hall conductivity σ A xy below 30 K is in line with its transport characteristic at low temperatures, implying the scattering of conduction electrons due to magnetic disorder and the evolution of the Fermi surface induced by a possible spin-reorientation transition.« less

  1. Anomalous Hall effect in the van der Waals bonded ferromagnet Fe 3 - x GeTe 2

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Liu, Yu; Stavitski, Eli; Attenkofer, Klaus

    Here, we report the anomalous Hall effect (AHE) in single crystals of a quasi-two-dimensional Fe 3–xGeTe 2 (x ≈ 0.36) ferromagnet grown by the flux method which induces defects on the Fe site and bad metallic resistivity. Fe K-edge x-ray absorption spectroscopy was measured to provide information on the local atomic environment in such crystals. The dc and ac magnetic susceptibility measurements indicate a second-stage transition below 119 K in addition to the paramagnetic to ferromagnetic transition at 153 K. A linear scaling behavior between the modified anomalous Hall resistivity ρxy/μ0Heff and longitudinal resistivity ρ 2 xxM/μ 0H eff impliesmore » that the AHE in Fe 3–xGeTe 2 should be dominated by the intrinsic Karplus-Luttinger mechanism rather than the extrinsic skew-scattering and side-jump mechanisms. The observed deviation in the linear- M Hall conductivity σ A xy below 30 K is in line with its transport characteristic at low temperatures, implying the scattering of conduction electrons due to magnetic disorder and the evolution of the Fermi surface induced by a possible spin-reorientation transition.« less

  2. Processing of fine grained AISI 304L austenitic stainless steel by cold rolling and high-temperature short-term annealing

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Naghizadeh, Meysam; Mirzadeh, Hamed

    2018-05-01

    An advanced thermomechanical process based on the formation and reversion of deformation-induced martensite was used to refine the grain size and enhance the hardness of an AISI 304L austenitic stainless steel. Both low and high reversion annealing temperatures and also the repetition of the whole thermomechanical cycle were considered. While a microstructure with average austenite grain size of a few micrometers was achieved based on cold rolling and high-temperature short-term annealing, an extreme grain refinement up to submicrometer regime was obtained by cold rolling followed by low-temperature long-term annealing. However, the required annealing time was found to be much longer, which negates its appropriateness for industrial production. While a magnificent grain refinement was achieved by one pass of the high-temperature thermomechanical process, the reduction in grain size was negligible by the repetition of the whole cycle. It was found that the hardness of the thermomechanically processed material is much higher than that of the as-received material. The results of the present work were shown to be compatible with the general trend of grain size dependence of hardness for AISI 304L stainless steel based on the Hall-Petch relationship. The results were also discussed based on the X-ray evaluation of dislocation density by modified Williamson-Hall plots.

  3. Comment on Hall et al. (2017), "How to Choose Between Measures of Tinnitus Loudness for Clinical Research? A Report on the Reliability and Validity of an Investigator-Administered Test and a Patient-Reported Measure Using Baseline Data Collected in a Phase IIa Drug Trial".

    PubMed

    Sabour, Siamak

    2018-03-08

    The purpose of this letter, in response to Hall, Mehta, and Fackrell (2017), is to provide important knowledge about methodology and statistical issues in assessing the reliability and validity of an audiologist-administered tinnitus loudness matching test and a patient-reported tinnitus loudness rating. The author uses reference textbooks and published articles regarding scientific assessment of the validity and reliability of a clinical test to discuss the statistical test and the methodological approach in assessing validity and reliability in clinical research. Depending on the type of the variable (qualitative or quantitative), well-known statistical tests can be applied to assess reliability and validity. The qualitative variables of sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, false positive and false negative rates, likelihood ratio positive and likelihood ratio negative, as well as odds ratio (i.e., ratio of true to false results), are the most appropriate estimates to evaluate validity of a test compared to a gold standard. In the case of quantitative variables, depending on distribution of the variable, Pearson r or Spearman rho can be applied. Diagnostic accuracy (validity) and diagnostic precision (reliability or agreement) are two completely different methodological issues. Depending on the type of the variable (qualitative or quantitative), well-known statistical tests can be applied to assess validity.

  4. Beyond the Quantum Hall Effect: New Phases of 2D Electrons at High Magnetic Field

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Eisenstein, James

    2007-03-01

    In this talk I will discuss recent experiments on high mobility single and double layer 2D electron systems in which collective phases lying outside the usual quantum Hall effect paradigm have been detected and studied. For example, in single layer 2D systems near half-filling of highly excited Landau levels new states characterized by a massive anisotropy in the electrical resistivity of the sample are observed at very low temperature. The anisotropy has been widely interpreted as the signature of a new class of correlated electron phases which incorporate a stripe-like charge density modulation. Orientational ordering of small striped domains at low temperatures accounts for the resistive anisotropy and is reminiscent of the isotropic-to-nematic phase transition in classical liquid crystals. Double layer 2D electron systems possess collective phases not present in single layer systems. In particular, when the total number of electrons in the bilayer equals the degeneracy of a single Landau level, an unusual phase appears at small layer separation. This phase possesses a novel broken symmetry, spontaneous interlayer phase coherence, which has a number of dramatic experimental signatures. The interlayer tunneling conductance develops a strong and very sharp resonance around zero bias resembling the dc Josephson effect. At the same time, both the longitudinal and Hall resistances of the sample vanish at low temperatures when currents are driven in opposite directions through the two layers. These, and other observations are broadly consistent with theories in which the broken symmetry phase can equivalently be described as a pseudospin ferromagnet or an (imperfect) excitonic superfluid. This work reflects a collaboration with M.P. Lilly, K.B. Cooper, I.B. Spielman, M. Kellogg, L.A. Tracy, L.N. Pfeiffer, and K.W. West.

  5. Strain and grain size of TiO2 nanoparticles from TEM, Raman spectroscopy and XRD: The revisiting of the Williamson-Hall plot method

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kibasomba, Pierre M.; Dhlamini, Simon; Maaza, Malik; Liu, Chuan-Pu; Rashad, Mohamed M.; Rayan, Diaa A.; Mwakikunga, Bonex W.

    2018-06-01

    The Williamson-Hall (W-H) equation, which has been used to obtain relative crystallite sizes and strains between samples since 1962, is revisited. A modified W-H equation is derived which takes into account the Scherrer equation, first published in 1918, (which traditionally gives more absolute crystallite size prediction) and strain prediction from Raman spectra. It is found that W-H crystallite sizes are on average 2.11 ± 0.01 times smaller than the sizes from Scherrer equation. Furthermore the strain from the W-H plots when compared to strain obtained from Raman spectral red-shifts yield factors whose values depend on the phases in the materials - whether anatase, rutile or brookite. Two main phases are identified in the annealing temperatures (350 °C-700 °C) chosen herein - anatase and brookite. A transition temperature of 550 °C has been found for nano-TiO2 to irreversibly transform from brookite to anatase by plotting the Raman peak shifts against the annealing temperatures. The W-H underestimation on the strain in the brookite phase gives W-H/Raman factor of 3.10 ± 0.05 whereas for the anatase phase, one gets 2.46 ± 0.03. The new βtot2cos2θ-sinθ plot and when fitted with a polynomial yield less strain but much better matching with experimental TEM crystallite sizes and the agglomerates than both the traditional Williamson-Hall and the Scherrer methods. There is greater improvement in the model when linearized - that is the βtotcos2θ-sinθ plot rather than the βtot2cos2θ-sinθ plot.

  6. Measurement of filling factor 5/2 quasiparticle interference with observation of charge e/4 and e/2 period oscillations.

    PubMed

    Willett, R L; Pfeiffer, L N; West, K W

    2009-06-02

    A standing problem in low-dimensional electron systems is the nature of the 5/2 fractional quantum Hall (FQH) state: Its elementary excitations are a focus for both elucidating the state's properties and as candidates in methods to perform topological quantum computation. Interferometric devices may be used to manipulate and measure quantum Hall edge excitations. Here we use a small-area edge state interferometer designed to observe quasiparticle interference effects. Oscillations consistent in detail with the Aharonov-Bohm effect are observed for integer quantum Hall and FQH states (filling factors nu = 2, 5/3, and 7/3) with periods corresponding to their respective charges and magnetic field positions. With these factors as charge calibrations, periodic transmission through the device consistent with quasiparticle charge e/4 is observed at nu = 5/2 and at lowest temperatures. The principal finding of this work is that, in addition to these e/4 oscillations, periodic structures corresponding to e/2 are also observed at 5/2 nu and at lowest temperatures. Properties of the e/4 and e/2 oscillations are examined with the device sensitivity sufficient to observe temperature evolution of the 5/2 quasiparticle interference. In the model of quasiparticle interference, this presence of an effective e/2 period may empirically reflect an e/2 quasiparticle charge or may reflect multiple passes of the e/4 quasiparticle around the interferometer. These results are discussed within a picture of e/4 quasiparticle excitations potentially possessing non-Abelian statistics. These studies demonstrate the capacity to perform interferometry on 5/2 excitations and reveal properties important for understanding this state and its excitations.

  7. Measurement of filling factor 5/2 quasiparticle interference with observation of charge e/4 and e/2 period oscillations

    PubMed Central

    Willett, R. L.; Pfeiffer, L. N.; West, K. W.

    2009-01-01

    A standing problem in low-dimensional electron systems is the nature of the 5/2 fractional quantum Hall (FQH) state: Its elementary excitations are a focus for both elucidating the state's properties and as candidates in methods to perform topological quantum computation. Interferometric devices may be used to manipulate and measure quantum Hall edge excitations. Here we use a small-area edge state interferometer designed to observe quasiparticle interference effects. Oscillations consistent in detail with the Aharonov–Bohm effect are observed for integer quantum Hall and FQH states (filling factors ν = 2, 5/3, and 7/3) with periods corresponding to their respective charges and magnetic field positions. With these factors as charge calibrations, periodic transmission through the device consistent with quasiparticle charge e/4 is observed at ν = 5/2 and at lowest temperatures. The principal finding of this work is that, in addition to these e/4 oscillations, periodic structures corresponding to e/2 are also observed at 5/2 ν and at lowest temperatures. Properties of the e/4 and e/2 oscillations are examined with the device sensitivity sufficient to observe temperature evolution of the 5/2 quasiparticle interference. In the model of quasiparticle interference, this presence of an effective e/2 period may empirically reflect an e/2 quasiparticle charge or may reflect multiple passes of the e/4 quasiparticle around the interferometer. These results are discussed within a picture of e/4 quasiparticle excitations potentially possessing non-Abelian statistics. These studies demonstrate the capacity to perform interferometry on 5/2 excitations and reveal properties important for understanding this state and its excitations. PMID:19433804

  8. Spin transport study in a Rashba spin-orbit coupling system

    PubMed Central

    Mei, Fuhong; Zhang, Shan; Tang, Ning; Duan, Junxi; Xu, Fujun; Chen, Yonghai; Ge, Weikun; Shen, Bo

    2014-01-01

    One of the most important topics in spintronics is spin transport. In this work, spin transport properties of two-dimensional electron gas in AlxGa1-xN/GaN heterostructure were studied by helicity-dependent photocurrent measurements at room temperature. Spin-related photocurrent was detected under normal incidence of a circularly polarized laser with a Gaussian distribution. On one hand, spin polarized electrons excited by the laser generate a diffusive spin polarization current, which leads to a vortex charge current as a result of anomalous circular photogalvanic effect. On the other hand, photo-induced spin polarized electrons driven by a longitudinal electric field give rise to a transverse current via anomalous Hall Effect. Both of these effects originated from the Rashba spin-orbit coupling. By analyzing spin-related photocurrent varied with laser position, the contributions of the two effects were differentiated and the ratio of the spin diffusion coefficient to photo-induced anomalous spin Hall mobility Ds/μs = 0.08 V was extracted at room temperature. PMID:24504193

  9. Correlation between the Hall Resistance and Magnetoresistance in the Mixed State of an Nd2 - x Ce x CuO4 + δ Electronic Superconductor

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Charikova, T. B.; Shelushinina, N. G.; Petukhov, D. S.; Kharus, G. I.; Petukhova, O. E.; Ivanov, A. A.

    2017-12-01

    The Hall resistance and the magnetoresistance in the mixed state of the Nd2 - x Ce x CuO4 + δ quasi-two-dimensional system near the antiferromagnetic-superconductor (AF-SC) phase transition have been measured at doping levels x = 0.14 and 0.15, and a correlation has been established. This correlation can be analyzed using the following power relationship: ρ xy ( B) [ρ xx ( B)]β. It was found that index β varied from 0.94 ± 0.03 in the region of AF and SC coexistence ( x = 0.14) to 0.6 ± 0.1 in the SC region with the maximum critical temperature ( x = 0.15) at low temperatures and weak magnetic fields. This reduction suggests that the symmetry of carrier pairing changes at the boundary of the transition from the phase of antiferromagnetic ordering and spin density waves to the superconducting phase in the presence of antiferromagnetic spin fluctuations.

  10. Quantum Transport near the Charge Neutrality Point in Inverted Type-II InAs/GaSb Field-Effect Transistors

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Pan, W.; Klem, J. F.; Kim, J. K.; Thalakulam, M.; Cich, M. J.; Lyo, S. K.

    2013-03-01

    We present here our recent quantum transport results around the charge neutrality point (CNP) in a type-II InAs/GaSb field-effect transistor. At zero magnetic field, a conductance minimum close to 4e2 / h develops at the CNP and it follows semi-logarithmic temperature dependence. In quantized magnetic (B) fields and at low temperatures, well developed integer quantum Hall states are observed in the electron as well as hole regimes. Electron transport shows noisy behavior around the CNP at extremely high B fields. When the diagonal conductivity σxx is plotted against the Hall conductivity σxy, a conductivity circle law is discovered, suggesting a chaotic quantum transport behavior. Sandia National Laboratories is a multi-program laboratory managed and operated by Sandia Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of Lockheed Martin Corporation, for the U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration under contract DE-AC04-94AL85000.

  11. Electrical properties of Pb{sub 1-x}Mn{sub x}Te single crystals with an excess of tellurium

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Bagieva, G. Z., E-mail: bagieva-gjulandam@rambler.ru; Abdinova, G. D.; Mustafayev, N. B.

    2013-03-15

    The effect of excess Te atoms (as high as 0.5 at %) and thermal treatment at 473 K for 120 h on the electrical conductivity {sigma}, the thermopower coefficient {alpha}, and the Hall coefficient R of Pb{sub 0.96}Mn{sub 0.04}Te single crystals in the temperature range {approx}77-300 K is investigated. It is shown that excess atoms of tellurium predominantly act as acceptor impurity centers at low concentrations in unannealed samples and form antisite defects at relatively high concentrations (0.05 at % or higher) being located mainly in vacancies of the lead sublattice, and decrease the hole concentration. As a result ofmore » annealing, certain lattice defects (for example, deformational) are healed, and the accommodation process for Te atoms at lead-sublattice vacancies is intensified. These processes substantially affect the values of the electrical parameters, their temperature dependences, as well as the sign of the thermopower and Hall coefficients of the samples.« less

  12. Investigation of the unidirectional spin heat conveyer effect in a 200 nm thin Yttrium Iron Garnet film

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Wid, Olga; Bauer, Jan; Müller, Alexander; Breitenstein, Otwin; Parkin, Stuart S. P.; Schmidt, Georg

    2016-06-01

    We have investigated the unidirectional spin wave heat conveyer effect in sub-micron thick yttrium iron garnet (YIG) films using lock-in thermography (LIT). Although the effect is small in thin layers this technique allows us to observe asymmetric heat transport by magnons which leads to asymmetric temperature profiles differing by several mK on both sides of the exciting antenna, respectively. Comparison of Damon-Eshbach and backward volume modes shows that the unidirectional heat flow is indeed due to non-reciprocal spin-waves. Because of the finite linewidth, small asymmetries can still be observed when only the uniform mode of ferromagnetic resonance is excited. The latter is of extreme importance for example when measuring the inverse spin-Hall effect because the temperature differences can result in thermovoltages at the contacts. Because of the non-reciprocity these thermovoltages reverse their sign with a reversal of the magnetic field which is typically deemed the signature of the inverse spin-Hall voltage.

  13. Large magnetoresistance and Hall effect in paramagnetic black phosphorus synthesized from red phosphorus

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Jiang, X. H.; Xiong, F.; Zhang, X. W.; Hua, Z. H.; Wang, Z. H.; Yang, S. G.

    2018-05-01

    Black phosphorus (BP) is an important material, which can be used in the fabrication of phosphorene. In this manuscript, a systematic study was described on the high-pressure synthesis of BP from red phosphorus. For physical characterization, the bulk BP was synthesized under the high pressure of 1.6 GPa and high temperature of 700 °C for 2 h. X-ray diffraction and Raman studies illustrated the formation of high-quality pure phase pleomorphic BP. A nonlinear Hall effect was observed in the BP sample. Magnetoresistance (MR) in the bulk BP reached 90% at 40 K, and positive-to-negative crossover in MR was measured. A paramagnetic feature was found in the prepared bulk BP, and the MR results were attributed to the combination of the effect of classical resistor network and magnetic polaron. The conduction tensors were analyzed by a two-band model to determine the carrier concentration and mobility at several temperatures.

  14. Local light-induced magnetization using nanodots and chiral molecules.

    PubMed

    Dor, Oren Ben; Morali, Noam; Yochelis, Shira; Baczewski, Lech Tomasz; Paltiel, Yossi

    2014-11-12

    With the increasing demand for miniaturization, nanostructures are likely to become the primary components of future integrated circuits. Different approaches are being pursued toward achieving efficient electronics, among which are spin electronics devices (spintronics). In principle, the application of spintronics should result in reducing the power consumption of electronic devices. Recently a new, promising, effective approach for spintronics has emerged, using spin selectivity in electron transport through chiral molecules. In this work, using chiral molecules and nanocrystals, we achieve local spin-based magnetization generated optically at ambient temperatures. Through the chiral layer, a spin torque can be transferred without permanent charge transfer from the nanocrystals to a thin ferromagnetic layer, creating local perpendicular magnetization. We used Hall sensor configuration and atomic force microscopy (AFM) to measure the induced local magnetization. At low temperatures, anomalous spin Hall effects were measured using a thin Ni layer. The results may lead to optically controlled spintronics logic devices that will enable low power consumption, high density, and cheap fabrication.

  15. Chiral Majorana fermion modes in a quantum anomalous Hall insulator–superconductor structure

    DOE PAGES

    He, Qing Lin; Pan, Lei; Stern, Alexander L.; ...

    2017-07-21

    Majorana fermion is a hypothetical particle that is its own antiparticle. We report transport measurements that suggest the existence of one-dimensional chiral Majorana fermion modes in the hybrid system of a quantum anomalous Hall insulator thin film coupled with a superconductor. As the external magnetic field is swept, half-integer quantized conductance plateaus are observed at the locations of magnetization reversals, giving a distinct signature of the Majorana fermion modes. This transport signature is reproducible over many magnetic field sweeps and appears at different temperatures. This finding may open up an avenue to control Majorana fermions for implementing robust topological quantummore » computing.« less

  16. Nonlinear radiative heat transfer and Hall effects on a viscous fluid in a semi-porous curved channel

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Abbas, Z.; Naveed, M., E-mail: rana.m.naveed@gmail.com; Sajid, M.

    In this paper, effects of Hall currents and nonlinear radiative heat transfer in a viscous fluid passing through a semi-porous curved channel coiled in a circle of radius R are analyzed. A curvilinear coordinate system is used to develop the mathematical model of the considered problem in the form partial differential equations. Similarity solutions of the governing boundary value problems are obtained numerically using shooting method. The results are also validated with the well-known finite difference technique known as the Keller-Box method. The analysis of the involved pertinent parameters on the velocity and temperature distributions is presented through graphs andmore » tables.« less

  17. Superior material qualities and transport properties of InGaN channel heterostructure grown by pulsed metal organic chemical vapor deposition

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ya-Chao, Zhang; Xiao-Wei, Zhou; Sheng-Rui, Xu; Da-Zheng, Chen; Zhi-Zhe, Wang; Xing, Wang; Jin-Feng, Zhang; Jin-Cheng, Zhang; Yue, Hao

    2016-01-01

    Pulsed metal organic chemical vapor deposition is introduced into the growth of InGaN channel heterostructure for improving material qualities and transport properties. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy imaging shows the phase separation free InGaN channel with smooth and abrupt interface. A very high two-dimensional electron gas density of approximately 1.85 × 1013 cm-2 is obtained due to the superior carrier confinement. In addition, the Hall mobility reaches 967 cm2/V·s, owing to the suppression of interface roughness scattering. Furthermore, temperature-dependent Hall measurement results show that InGaN channel heterostructure possesses a steady two-dimensional electron gas density over the tested temperature range, and has superior transport properties at elevated temperatures compared with the traditional GaN channel heterostructure. The gratifying results imply that InGaN channel heterostructure grown by pulsed metal organic chemical vapor deposition is a promising candidate for microwave power devices. Project supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Nos. 61306017, 61334002, 61474086, and 11435010) and the Young Scientists Fund of the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 61306017).

  18. In vitro assessment of temperature change in the pulp chamber during cavity preparation.

    PubMed

    Oztürk, Bora; Uşümez, Aslihan; Oztürk, A Nilgun; Ozer, Füsun

    2004-05-01

    Tooth preparation with a high-speed handpiece may cause thermal harm to the dental pulp. This in vitro study evaluated the temperature changes in the pulp chamber during 4 different tooth preparation techniques and the effects of 3 different levels of water cooling. The tip of a thermocouple was positioned in the center of the pulp chamber of 120 extracted Shuman premolar teeth. Four different tooth preparation techniques were compared: (1) Low air pressure plus low load (LA/LL), (2) low air pressure plus high load (LA/HL), (3) high air pressure plus low load (HA/LL), and (4) high air pressure plus high load (HA/HL) in combination with 3 different water cooling rates. Control specimens were not water cooled; low water cooling consisted of 15 mL/min, and high water cooling consisted of 40 mL/min. Twelve different groups were established (n=10). An increase of 5.5 degrees C was regarded as critical value for pulpal health. The results were analyzed with a 3-factor ANOVA and Bonferroni adjusted Mann Whitney U test (alpha=.004). For all techniques without water cooling (LA/LL/0, LA/HL/0, HA/LL/0, and HA/HL/0), the average temperature rise within the pulpal chamber exceeded 5.5 degrees C during cavity preparation (7.1 degrees C; 8.9 degrees C; 11.4 degrees C, and 19.7 degrees C, respectively). When low water cooling was used with high air pressure and high load technique (HA/HL/15), the average temperature rise exceeded 5.5 degrees C limit (5.9 degrees C). However, when high water cooling (LA/LL/40, LA/HL/40, HA/LL/40, and HA/HL/40) was utilized, the critical 5.5 degrees C value was not reached with any air pressure or load (3.1 degrees C, 2.8 degrees C, 2.2 degrees C, and -1.8 degrees C, respectively). Within the limitations of this in vitro study, the results indicate that reducing the amount of water cooling or increasing air pressure and load during cavity preparation increased the temperature of the pulp chamber in extracted teeth.

  19. Conditions and growth rate of Rayleigh instability in a Hall thruster under the effect of ion temperature.

    PubMed

    Malik, Hitendra K; Singh, Sukhmander

    2011-03-01

    Rayleigh instability is investigated in a Hall thruster under the effect of finite temperature and density gradient of the plasma species. The instability occurs only when the frequency of the oscillations ω falls within a frequency band described by k{y}u₀+1/k_{y}∂²u_{0}/∂x²+Ω/k_{y}n_{0}∂n₀/∂x≪ω

  20. Certain physical properties of cobalt and nickel borides

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Kostetskiy, I. I.; Lvov, S. N.

    1981-01-01

    The temperature dependence of the electrical resistivity, the thermal conductivity, and the thermal emf of cobalt and nickel borides were studied. In the case of the nickel borides the magnetic susceptibility and the Hall coefficient were determined at room temperature. The results are discussed with allowance for the current carrier concentration, the effect of various mechanisms of current-carrier scattering and the location of the Fermi level in relation to the 3d band.

  1. Characterization of a Hall Effect Thruster Using Thermal Imaging

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2007-03-01

    to physically attach the thermocouples to the object, which is destructive to the item being monitored if a strong adhesive or welding is used...by detecting incident thermal radiation and converting it to a temperature. A thermistor bolometer, for example, consists of a material, usually

  2. Managing the Environment for Older Students.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Gelwicks, Louis E.; Weinstock, Ruth

    1980-01-01

    The environmental adjustments required to make campuses responsive to the needs of older persons are seen as tending to fall in the realm of environmental management. Security, orientation, sight, sound, ambient temperature, seating, time, transportation, lounges, and campus residence halls are some environmental needs which are discussed. (MLW)

  3. Temperature dependence of spin-orbit torques in W/CoFeB bilayers

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Skowroński, Witold, E-mail: skowron@agh.edu.pl; Cecot, Monika; Kanak, Jarosław

    We report on the temperature variation of spin-orbit torques in perpendicularly magnetized W/CoFeB bilayers. Harmonic Hall voltage measurements in perpendicularly magnetized CoFeB reveal increased longitudinal and transverse effective magnetic field components at low temperatures. The damping-like spin-orbit torque reaches an efficiency of 0.55 at 19 K. Scanning transmission electron microscopy and X-ray reflectivity measurements indicate that considerable interface mixing between W and CoFeB may be responsible for strong spin-orbit interactions.

  4. Topological Weyl superconductor to diffusive thermal Hall metal crossover in the B phase of UPt3

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Goswami, Pallab; Nevidomskyy, Andriy H.

    2015-12-01

    The recent phase-sensitive measurements in the superconducting B phase of UPt3 provide strong evidence for the triplet, chiral kz(kx±i ky) 2 pairing symmetries, which endow the Cooper pairs with orbital angular momentum projections Lz=±2 along the c axis. In the absence of disorder such pairing can support both line and point nodes, and both types of nodal quasiparticles exhibit nontrivial topology in the momentum space. The point nodes, located at the intersections of the closed Fermi surfaces with the c axis, act as the double monopoles and the antimonopoles of the Berry curvature, and generalize the notion of Weyl quasiparticles. Consequently, the B phase should support an anomalous thermal Hall effect, the polar Kerr effect, in addition to the protected Fermi arcs on the (1 ,0 ,0 ) and the (0 ,1 ,0 ) surfaces. The line node at the Fermi surface equator acts as a vortex loop in the momentum space and gives rise to the zero-energy, dispersionless Andreev bound states on the (0 ,0 ,1 ) surface. At the transition from the B phase to the A phase, the time-reversal symmetry is restored, and only the line node survives inside the A phase. As both line and double-Weyl point nodes possess linearly vanishing density of states, we show that weak disorder acts as a marginally relevant perturbation. Consequently, an infinitesimal amount of disorder destroys the ballistic quasiparticle pole, while giving rise to a diffusive phase with a finite density of states at the zero energy. The resulting diffusive phase exhibits T -linear specific heat, and an anomalous thermal Hall effect. We predict that the low-temperature thermodynamic and transport properties display a crossover between a ballistic thermal Hall semimetal and a diffusive thermal Hall metal. By contrast, the diffusive phase obtained from a time-reversal-invariant pairing exhibits only the T -linear specific heat without any anomalous thermal Hall effect.

  5. Wavevector-Frequency Analysis with Applications to Acoustics

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1994-01-01

    Turbulent Boundary Layer Pressure Measured by Microphone Arrays," Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, vol. 49, no. 3, March 1971 , pp. 862-877. 1...ARplications of Green’s FuntionsinScie,.-and Enginlering, Prentice-Hall, Inc., Englewood Hills, NJ, 1971 . 9. 3. Ffowcs-Williams et al., Modern Methods for...variables of a random process are kalled Joint w.merit ,. The m,n-th joint moment of the random variables, v and w, iz flefined by E ,N 1 f (aB) do d- where

  6. Skew scattering dominated anomalous Hall effect in Co x (MgO)100-x granular thin films

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Zhang, Qiang; Wen, Yan; Zhao, Yuelei; Li, Peng; He, Xin; Zhang, Junli; He, Yao; Peng, Yong; Yu, Ronghai; Zhang, Xixiang

    2017-10-01

    We investigated the mechanism(s) of the anomalous Hall effect (AHE) in magnetic granular materials by fabricating 100 nm-thick thin films of Co x (MgO)100-x with a Co volume fraction of 34  ⩽  x  ⩽  100 using co-sputtering at room temperature. We measured the temperature dependence of longitudinal resistivity ({{ρ }xx} ) and anomalous Hall resistivity ({{ρ }AHE} ) from 5 K to 300 K in all samples. We found that when x decreases from 100 to 34, the values of {{ρ }xx} and {{ρ }AHE} respectively increased by about four and three orders in magnitude. By linearly fitting the data, obtained at 5 K, of anomalous Hall coefficient ({{R}s} ) and of {{ρ }xx} to log({{R}s})˜ γ log({{ρ }xx}) , we found that our results perfectly fell on a straight line with a slope of γ = 0.97  ±  0.02. This fitting value of γ in {{R}s}\\propto ρ xxγ ~ clearly suggests that skew scattering dominated the AHE in this granular system. To explore the effect of the scattering on the AHE, we performed the same measurements on annealed samples. We found that although both {{ρ }xx} and {{ρ }AHE} significantly reduced after annealing, the correlation between them was almost the same, which was confirmed by the fitted value, γ   =  0.99  ±  0.03. These data strongly suggest that the AHE originates from the skew scattering in Co-MgO granular thin films no matter how strong the scattering of electrons by the interfaces and defects is. This observation may be of importance to the development of spintronic devices based on MgO.

  7. Hamiltonian theory of gaps, masses, and polarization in quantum Hall states

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Shankar, R.

    2001-02-01

    In two short papers I had described an extension, to all length scales, of the Hamiltonian theory of composite fermions (CF) that Murthy and I developed for the infrared, and applied it to compute finite-temperature quantities for quantum Hall fractions. I furnish details of the extended theory and apply it to Jain fractions ν=p/(2ps+1). The explicit operator description in terms of the CF allows one to answer quantitative and qualitative issues, some of which cannot even be posed otherwise. I compute activation gaps for several potentials, exhibit their particle-hole symmetry, the profiles of charge density in states with a quasiparticle or hole (all in closed form), and compare to results from trial wave functions and exact diagonalization. The Hartree-Fock approximation is used, since much of the nonperturbative physics is built-in at tree level. I compare the gaps to experiment, and comment on the rough equality of normalized masses near half- and quarter-filling. I compute the critical fields at which the Hall system will jump from one quantized value of polarization to another, and the polarization and relaxation rates for half-filling as a function of temperature and propose a Korringa-like law. After providing some plausibility arguments, I explore the possibility of describing several magnetic phenomena in dirty systems with an effective potential, by extracting a free parameter describing the potential from one data point and then using it to predict all the others from that sample. This works to the accuracy typical of this theory (10-20 %). I explain why the CF behaves like a free particle in some magnetic experiments when it is not, what exactly the CF is made of, what one means by its dipole moment, and how the comparison of theory to experiment must be modified to fit the peculiarities of the quantized Hall problem.

  8. Emergence of nontrivial magnetic excitations in a spin-liquid state of kagomé volborthite

    PubMed Central

    Watanabe, Daiki; Sugii, Kaori; Shimozawa, Masaaki; Suzuki, Yoshitaka; Yajima, Takeshi; Ishikawa, Hajime; Hiroi, Zenji; Shibauchi, Takasada; Matsuda, Yuji; Yamashita, Minoru

    2016-01-01

    When quantum fluctuations destroy underlying long-range ordered states, novel quantum states emerge. Spin-liquid (SL) states of frustrated quantum antiferromagnets, in which highly correlated spins fluctuate down to very low temperatures, are prominent examples of such quantum states. SL states often exhibit exotic physical properties, but the precise nature of the elementary excitations behind such phenomena remains entirely elusive. Here, we use thermal Hall measurements that can capture the unexplored property of the elementary excitations in SL states, and report the observation of anomalous excitations that may unveil the unique features of the SL state. Our principal finding is a negative thermal Hall conductivity κxy which the charge-neutral spin excitations in a gapless SL state of the 2D kagomé insulator volborthite Cu3V2O7(OH)2⋅2H2O exhibit, in much the same way in which charged electrons show the conventional electric Hall effect. We find that κxy is absent in the high-temperature paramagnetic state and develops upon entering the SL state in accordance with the growth of the short-range spin correlations, demonstrating that κxy is a key signature of the elementary excitation formed in the SL state. These results suggest the emergence of nontrivial elementary excitations in the gapless SL state which feel the presence of fictitious magnetic flux, whose effective Lorentz force is found to be less than 1/100 of the force experienced by free electrons. PMID:27439874

  9. Effect of silver doping on the elastic properties of CdS nanoparticles

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Dey, P. C.; Das, R.

    2018-05-01

    CdS and Ag doped CdS (CdS/Ag) nanoparticles have been prepared via chemical method from a Cadmium acetate precursor and Thiourea. The synthesized CdS and CdS/Ag nanoparticles have been characterized by the X-ray Diffraction and High Resolution Transmission Electron Microscope. Here, these nanoparticles have been synthesized at room temperature and all the characterization have also been done at room temperature only. The XRD results reveal that the products are crystalline with cubic zinc blende structure. HRTEM images show that the prepared nanoparticles are nearly spherical in shape. Williamson-Hall method and Size-Strain Plot (SSP) have been used to study the individual contribution of crystalline sizes and lattice strain on the peak broadening of the CdS and CdS/Ag nanoparticles. The different modified model of Williamson-Hall method such as, uniform deformation model, uniform stress deformation model and uniform energy density deformation model and SSP method have been used to calculate the different physical parameter such as lattice strain, stress and energy density for all diffraction peaks of the XRD, corresponding to the CdS and silver doped CdS (CdS/Ag). The obtained results reveal that the average particle size of the prepared CdS and CdS/Ag nanoparticles estimated from the HRTEM images, Williamson-Hall analysis and SSP method are highly correlated with each other. Further, all these result confirms that doping of Ag significantly affects the elastic properties of CdS.

  10. Annealing-temperature-dependent voltage-sign reversal in all-oxide spin Seebeck devices using RuO2

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kirihara, Akihiro; Ishida, Masahiko; Yuge, Ryota; Ihara, Kazuki; Iwasaki, Yuma; Sawada, Ryohto; Someya, Hiroko; Iguchi, Ryo; Uchida, Ken-ichi; Saitoh, Eiji; Yorozu, Shinichi

    2018-04-01

    Thermoelectric converters based on the spin Seebeck effect (SSE) have attracted great attention due to their potential to offer novel applications such as energy harvesting and heat-flow sensing. For converting a SSE-induced spin current into an electric current, a transition metal film such as Pt, which exhibits large inverse spin-Hall effect (ISHE), has been typically used. In this work, we show an all-oxide SSE device using ruthenium oxide (RuO2) as a conductive film. We found that both the sign and magnitude of the SSE-induced ISHE voltage V appearing in the RuO2 film changes depending on the post annealing temperature, and that the magnitude can become larger than that of a standard SSE device using Pt. The similar sign change was also observed in Hall-resistance measurements of the RuO2 films. X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) spectra of as-deposited and annealed RuO2 revealed that the annealing process substantially improved the long-range crystalline order in RuO2. This suggests that change in the crystalline order may modify the dominant ISHE mechanism or electronic states in RuO2, leading to the sign reversal of V as well as the Hall coefficient. Our result demonstrates that RuO2 is an interesting material not only as a practical ISHE film but also as a testbed to study physics of spin-to-charge converters that depend on their crystalline order.

  11. Altering Test Environments for Reducing Test Anxiety and for Improving Academic Performance.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Bushnell, Don D.

    To test the effects of altering situational variables in stressful examinations on high test anxious and low test anxious undergraduates, mid-terms and final examinations were administered in two environmental settings: large lecture halls and small language laboratories. Mean test scores for high test anxious students in the language labs were…

  12. High-speed Internet Use and Academic Gratifications in the College Residence.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Matthews, Denise; Schrum, Lynne

    2003-01-01

    A multimethod exploration of undergraduates' high-speed Internet use in residence halls took a uses-and-gratifications approach and revealed Internet use as integral to students' lives. Students' negative comments about Internet distractions from academic work led to identification of an individual difference variable, internal locus of control of…

  13. Annular MHD Physics for Turbojet Energy Bypass

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Schneider, Steven J.

    2011-01-01

    The use of annular Hall type MHD generator/accelerator ducts for turbojet energy bypass is evaluated assuming weakly ionized flows obtained from pulsed nanosecond discharges. The equations for a 1-D, axisymmetric MHD generator/accelerator are derived and numerically integrated to determine the generator/accelerator performance characteristics. The concept offers a shockless means of interacting with high speed inlet flows and potentially offers variable inlet geometry performance without the complexity of moving parts simply by varying the generator loading parameter. The cycle analysis conducted iteratively with a spike inlet and turbojet flying at M = 7 at 30 km altitude is estimated to have a positive thrust per unit mass flow of 185 N-s/kg. The turbojet allowable combustor temperature is set at an aggressive 2200 deg K. The annular MHD Hall generator/accelerator is L = 3 m in length with a B(sub r) = 5 Tesla magnetic field and a conductivity of sigma = 5 mho/m for the generator and sigma= 1.0 mho/m for the accelerator. The calculated isentropic efficiency for the generator is eta(sub sg) = 84 percent at an enthalpy extraction ratio, eta(sub Ng) = 0.63. The calculated isentropic efficiency for the accelerator is eta(sub sa) = 81 percent at an enthalpy addition ratio, eta(sub Na) = 0.62. An assessment of the ionization fraction necessary to achieve a conductivity of sigma = 1.0 mho/m is n(sub e)/n = 1.90 X 10(exp -6), and for sigma = 5.0 mho/m is n(sub e)/n = 9.52 X 10(exp -6).

  14. Correlation of Hall and Shubnikov-de Haas Oscillations and Impurity States in Sn- and I- Doped Single Crystals p-Bi 2 Te 3

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Tahar, M. Z.; Popov, D. I.; Nemov, S. A.

    2018-03-01

    Oscillations of the Hall coefficient and Shubnikov-de Haas (SdH) were observed in p-Bi2Te3 crystals doped with Sn (acceptor) and with I (donor) in magnetic fields up to 9 T parallel to the C3 trigonal axis at low temperatures (2 K < T < 20K), which is an evidence of the spatial homogeneity of carriers in complex solid solutions. This supports the existence of a narrow band of Sn states (partially filled) against the background of the valence band acting as a reservoir with high density of states partially filled with electrons. Previously, in these systems in which the Fermi level was in the light-hole valence band, both large Hall and SdH oscillations were observed, with ∼π phase shift between them, whereas when the Fermi level was in the heavy-hole valence band (larger acceptor content), no quantum oscillations were observed. It was concluded that the observed low amplitude quantum oscillations may be attributed to the shifting of the reservoir from the light-hole band to the heavy-hole, and the observed phase shift in the range 0 - π/2 between Hall and SdH oscillations may be attributed to filling factor of the reservoir with electrons, which varies with I content. Experimental results along with theoretical explanation of these correlations are presented.

  15. Design and Testing of a Hall Effect Thruster with Additively Manufactured Components

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Hopping, Ethan

    The UAH-78AM is a low-power Hall effect thruster developed at the University of Alabama in Huntsville to study the application of low-cost additive manufacturing in the design and fabrication of Hall thrusters. The goal of this project is to assess the feasibility of using unconventional materials to produce a low-cost functioning Hall effect thruster and consider how additive manufacturing can expand the design space and provide other benefits. The thruster features channel walls and a propellant distributor that were manufactured using 3D printing with a variety of materials including ABS, ULTEM, and glazed ceramic. A version of the thruster was tested at NASA Glenn Research Center to obtain performance metrics and to validate the ability of the thruster to produce thrust and sustain a discharge. The design of the thruster and the transient performance measurements are presented here. Measured thrust ranged from 17.2 mN to 30.4 mN over a discharge power of 280 W to 520 W with an anode Isp range of 870 s to 1450 s. Temperature limitations of materials used for the channel walls and propellant distributor limit the ability to run the thruster at thermal steady-state. While the current thruster design is not yet ready for continuous operation, revisions to the device that could enable longer duration tests are discussed.

  16. Dopant behavior in heavily doped polycrystalline Ge1- x Sn x layers prepared with pulsed laser annealing in water

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Takahashi, Kouta; Kurosawa, Masashi; Ikenoue, Hiroshi; Sakashita, Mitsuo; Nakatsuka, Osamu; Zaima, Shigeaki

    2018-04-01

    A low-temperature process for the formation of heavily doped polycrystalline Ge (poly-Ge) layers on insulators is required to realize next-generation electronic devices. In this study, we have systematically investigated pulsed laser annealing (PLA) in flowing water for heavily doped amorphous Ge1- x Sn x layers (x ≈ 0.02) with various dopants such as B, Al, Ga, In, P, As, and Sb on SiO2. It is found that the dopant density after PLA with a high laser energy is reduced when the oxidized dopant has a lower oxygen chemical potential than H2O. As a result, for the p-type doping of B, Al, Ga, and In, we obtained a high Hall hole density of 5 × 1019 cm-3 for PLA with a low energy. Consequently, the Hall hole mobility is limited to as low as 10 cm2 V-1 s-1. In contrast, for As and Sb doping, because the density of substitutional dopants does not decrease even after PLA with a high energy, we achieved a high Hall electron density of 6 × 1019 cm-3 and a high Hall electron mobility simultaneously. These results indicate that preventing the oxidation of dopant atoms by water is an important factor for achieving heavy doping using PLA in water.

  17. Structural, magnetic, and electrical properties of perpendicularly magnetized Mn4-xFexGe thin films

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Niesen, Alessia; Teichert, Niclas; Matalla-Wagner, Tristan; Balluf, Jan; Dohmeier, Niklas; Glas, Manuel; Klewe, Christoph; Arenholz, Elke; Schmalhorst, Jan-Michael; Reiss, Günter

    2018-03-01

    We investigated the structural, magnetic, and electrical properties of the perpendicularly magnetized Mn4-xFexGe thin films (0.3 ≤ x ≤ 1). The tetragonally distorted structure was verified for all investigated stoichiometries. High coercive fields in the range of 1.61 T to 3.64 T at room temperature were measured and showed increasing behavior with decreasing Fe content. The magnetic moments range from (0.16 ± 0.02) μB/f.u for Mn3Fe1Ge to (0.08 ± 0.01) μB/f.u for Mn3.4Fe0.6Ge. X-ray absorption spectroscopy revealed ferromagnetic coupling of the Mn and Fe atoms in Mn4-xFexGe and the ferrimagnetic ordering of the Mn magnetic moments. Anomalous Hall effect measurements showed sharp magnetization switching. The resistivity values are in the range of 207 μΩ cm to 457 μΩ cm depending on the stoichiometry. From the contribution of the ordinary Hall effect in the anomalous Hall effect measurements, Hall constants, the charge carrier density, and mobility were deduced. The thermal conductivity was calculated using the Wiedemann-Franz law. All these values are strongly influenced by the stoichiometry. An alternative method was introduced for the determination of perpendicular magnetic anisotropy. The values range between 0.26 MJ/m3 and 0.36 MJ/m3.

  18. Hybrid-PIC Modeling of a High-Voltage, High-Specific-Impulse Hall Thruster

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Smith, Brandon D.; Boyd, Iain D.; Kamhawi, Hani; Huang, Wensheng

    2013-01-01

    The primary life-limiting mechanism of Hall thrusters is the sputter erosion of the discharge channel walls by high-energy propellant ions. Because of the difficulty involved in characterizing this erosion experimentally, many past efforts have focused on numerical modeling to predict erosion rates and thruster lifespan, but those analyses were limited to Hall thrusters operating in the 200-400V discharge voltage range. Thrusters operating at higher discharge voltages (V(sub d) >= 500 V) present an erosion environment that may differ greatly from that of the lower-voltage thrusters modeled in the past. In this work, HPHall, a well-established hybrid-PIC code, is used to simulate NASA's High-Voltage Hall Accelerator (HiVHAc) at discharge voltages of 300, 400, and 500V as a first step towards modeling the discharge channel erosion. It is found that the model accurately predicts the thruster performance at all operating conditions to within 6%. The model predicts a normalized plasma potential profile that is consistent between all three operating points, with the acceleration zone appearing in the same approximate location. The expected trend of increasing electron temperature with increasing discharge voltage is observed. An analysis of the discharge current oscillations shows that the model predicts oscillations that are much greater in amplitude than those measured experimentally at all operating points, suggesting that the differences in oscillation amplitude are not strongly associated with discharge voltage.

  19. Simulations of Hall reconnection in partially ionized plasmas

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Innocenti, Maria Elena; Jiang, Wei; Lapenta, Giovanni

    2017-04-01

    Magnetic reconnection occurs in the Hall, partially ionized regime in environments as diverse as molecular clouds, protostellar disks and regions of the solar chromosphere. While much is known about Hall reconnection in fully ionized plasmas, Hall reconnection in partially ionized plasmas is, in comparison, still relatively unexplored. This notwithstanding the fact that partial ionization is expected to affect fundamental processes in reconnection such as the transition from the slow, fluid to the fast, kinetic regime, the value of the reconnection rate and the dimensions of the diffusion regions [Malyshkin and Zweibel 2011 , Zweibel et al. 2011]. We present here the first, to our knowledge, fully kinetic simulations of Hall reconnection in partially ionized plasmas. The interaction of electrons and ions with the neutral background is realistically modelled via a Monte Carlo plug-in coded into the semi-implicit, fully kinetic code iPic3D [Markidis 2010]. We simulate a plasma with parameters compatible with the MRX experiments illustrated in Zweibel et al. 2011 and Lawrence et al. 2013, to be able to compare our simulation results with actual experiments. The gas and ion temperature is T=3 eV, the ion to electron temperature ratio is Tr=0.44, ion and electron thermal velocities are calculated accordingly resorting to a reduced mass ratio and a reduced value of the speed of light to reduce the computational costs of the simulations. The initial density of the plasma is set at n= 1.1 1014 cm-3 and is then left free to change during the simulation as a result of gas-plasma interaction. A set of simulations with initial ionisation percentage IP= 0.01, 0.1, 0.2, 0.6 is presented and compared with a reference simulation where no background gas is present (full ionization). In this first set of simulations, we assume to be able to externally control the initial relative densities of gas and plasma. Within this parameter range, the ion but not the electron population is heavily affected by collisions with the neutrals. In line with experimental results, we observe reduction of the reconnection rate and no variation of the half-thickness of the ion diffusion region with decreasing IP (increasing gas density). Contrarily to the experiments, we can confidently state that these effects are not influenced by boundary constraints. We then provide an explanation for the behaviour observed.

  20. Conductivity predictions for the 5/2 fractional quantum Hall state using the composite fermion superconductor model

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Foster, Kerwin Crayton

    The fractional quantum Hall effect (FQHE) occurs when a two-dimensional electron gas is placed in a strong magnetic field at low temperatures. When this effect occurs the Hall resistance, RH, defined to be the Hall voltage divided by the current, is quantized, with RH = (1/nu)h/ e2 where nu = p/q is the Landau level filling fraction; and p and q are relatively prime integers. For almost all observed FQHE states, q is odd with one notable exception: the nu = 5/2 FQHE state. Understanding the nature of this incompressible even-denominator state is one of the central questions in the theory of the FQHE and is the subject of this Dissertation. We use a powerful theoretical tool for studying the FQHE: composite fermion theory. Composite fermions can be viewed as electrons bound to an even number of magnetic flux quanta. Jain has shown that the FQHE for electrons can be viewed as an integer quantum Hall effect (p = 1) for composite fermions. More recently, Halperin, Lee and Read developed a successful theory of the compressible nu = 1/2 state using composite fermions. There is now compelling theoretical evidence that the 5/2 state is a so-called Moore-Read state---a state which can be viewed as a spin-polarized p-wave superconductor of composite fermions. We have developed a semi-phenomenological description of this state by modifying the Halperin-Lee-Read theory, adding a p-wave pairing interaction between composite fermions by hand. The electromagnetic response functions for the resulting superconducting state of composite fermions are then calculated. We show that these response functions exhibit the expected BCS 'coherence factor' effects, such as the Hebel-Slichter peak. Using the composite fermion response functions, we then calculate the corresponding electronic response functions using Chern-Simons theory. We find that in the electronic response, the most striking coherence factor effects (e.g., the Hebel-Slichter peak) are strongly suppressed. However, the low-temperature o = 2Delta threshold behavior does show clear coherence factor effects. Finally, we use our model to predict the wave-vector and frequency dependence of the longitudinal conductivity, sigmaxx( q, o), which can be measured in surface-acoustic-wave propagation experiments.

  1. On limitations of laser-induced fluorescence diagnostics for xenon ion velocity distribution function measurements in Hall thrusters

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Romadanov, I.; Raitses, Y.; Diallo, A.; Hara, K.; Kaganovich, I. D.; Smolyakov, A.

    2018-03-01

    Hall thruster operation is characterized by strong breathing oscillations of the discharge current, the plasma density, the temperature, and the electric field. Probe- and laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) diagnostics were used to measure temporal variations of plasma parameters and the xenon ion velocity distribution function (IVDF) in the near-field plasma plume in regimes with moderate (<18%) external modulations of applied DC discharge voltage at the frequency of the breathing mode. It was shown that the LIF signal collapses while the ion density at the same location is finite. The proposed explanation for this surprising result is based on a strong dependence of the excitation cross-section of metastables on the electron temperature. For large amplitudes of oscillations, the electron temperature at the minimum enters the region of very low cross-section (for the excitation of the xenon ions); thus, significantly reducing the production of metastable ions. Because the residence time of ions in the channel is generally shorter than the time scale of breathing oscillations, the density of the excited ions outside the thruster is low and they cannot be detected. In the range of temperature of oscillations, the ionization cross-section of xenon atoms remains sufficiently large to sustain the discharge. This finding suggests that the commonly used LIF diagnostic of xenon IVDF can be subject to large uncertainties in the regimes with significant oscillations of the electron temperature, or other plasma parameters.

  2. Design and Testing of a Hall Effect Thruster with 3D Printed Channel and Propellant Distributor

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Hopping, Ethan P.; Xu, Kunning G.

    2017-01-01

    The UAH-78AM is a low-power Hall effect thruster developed at the University of Alabama in Huntsville with channel walls and a propellant distributor manufactured using 3D printing. The goal of this project is to assess the feasibility of using unconventional materials to produce a low-cost functioning Hall effect thruster and consider how additive manufacturing can expand the design space and provide other benefits. A version of the thruster was tested at NASA Glenn Research Center to obtain performance metrics and to validate the ability of the thruster to produce thrust and sustain a discharge. An overview of the thruster design and transient performance measurements are presented here. Measured thrust ranged from 17.2 millinewtons to 30.4 millinewtons over a discharge power of 280 watts to 520 watts with an anode I (sub SP)(Specific Impulse) range of 870 seconds to 1450 seconds. Temperature limitations of materials used for the channel walls and propellant distributor limit the ability to run the thruster at thermal steady-state.

  3. Anomalous spin Hall magnetoresistance in Pt/Co bilayers

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kawaguchi, Masashi; Towa, Daiki; Lau, Yong-Chang; Takahashi, Saburo; Hayashi, Masamitsu

    2018-05-01

    We have studied the spin Hall magnetoresistance (SMR), the magnetoresistance within the plane transverse to the current flow, of Pt/Co bilayers. We find that the SMR increases with increasing Co thickness: the effective spin Hall angle for bilayers with thick Co exceeds the reported values of Pt when a conventional drift-diffusion model is used. An extended model including spin transport within the Co layer cannot account for the large SMR. To identify its origin, contributions from other sources are studied. For most bilayers, the SMR increases with decreasing temperature and increasing magnetic field, indicating that magnon-related effects in the Co layer play little role. Without the Pt layer, we do not observe the large SMR found for the Pt/Co bilayers with thick Co. Implementing the effect of the so-called interface magnetoresistance and the textured induced anisotropic scattering cannot account for the Co thickness dependent SMR. Since the large SMR is present for W/Co but its magnitude reduces in W/CoFeB, we infer that its origin is associated with a particular property of Co.

  4. Non-Contact Thermal Characterization of NASA's HERMeS Hall Thruster

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Huang, Wensheng; Kamhawi, Hani; Meyers, James L.; Yim, John T.; Neff, Gregory

    2015-01-01

    The Thermal Characterization Test of NASAs 12.5-kW Hall thruster is being completed. This thruster is being developed to support of a number of potential Solar Electric Propulsion Technology Demonstration Mission concepts, including the Asteroid Redirect Robotic Mission concept. As a part of this test, an infrared-based, non-contact thermal imaging system was developed to measure Hall thruster surfaces that are exposed to high voltage or harsh environment. To increase the accuracy of the measurement, a calibration array was implemented, and a pilot test was performed to determine key design parameters for the calibration array. The raw data is analyzed in conjunction with a simplified thermal model of the channel to account for reflection. The reduced data will be used to refine the thruster thermal model, which is critical to the verification of the thruster thermal specifications. The present paper will give an overview of the decision process that led to identification of the need for a non-contact temperature diagnostic, the development of said diagnostic, the measurement results, and the simplified thermal model of the channel.

  5. Multifunctional semiconductor micro-Hall devices for magnetic, electric, and photo-detection

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Gilbertson, A. M.; Cohen, L. F.; Sadeghi, Hatef

    2015-12-07

    We report the real-space voltage response of InSb/AlInSb micro-Hall devices to local photo-excitation, electric, and magnetic fields at room temperature using scanning probe microscopy. We show that the ultrafast generation of localised photocarriers results in conductance perturbations analogous to those produced by local electric fields. Experimental results are in good agreement with tight-binding transport calculations in the diffusive regime. The magnetic, photo, and charge sensitivity of a 2 μm wide probe are evaluated at a 10 μA bias current in the Johnson noise limit (valid at measurement frequencies > 10 kHz) to be, respectively, 500 nT/√Hz; 20 pW/√Hz (λ = 635 nm) comparable to commercial photoconductive detectors;more » and 0.05 e/√Hz comparable to that of single electron transistors. These results demonstrate the remarkably versatile sensing attributes of simple semiconductor micro-Hall devices that can be applied to a host of imaging and sensing applications.« less

  6. Hall-effect measurements of metalorganic vapor-phase epitaxy-grown p-type homoepitaxial GaN layers with various Mg concentrations

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Horita, Masahiro; Takashima, Shinya; Tanaka, Ryo; Matsuyama, Hideaki; Ueno, Katsunori; Edo, Masaharu; Suda, Jun

    2016-05-01

    Mg-doped p-type gallium nitride (GaN) layers with doping concentrations in the range from 6.5 × 1016 cm-3 (lightly doped) to 3.8 × 1019 cm-3 (heavily doped) were investigated by Hall-effect measurement for the analysis of hole concentration and mobility. p-GaN was homoepitaxially grown on a GaN free-standing substrate by metalorganic vapor-phase epitaxy. The threading dislocation density of the p-GaN was 4 × 106 cm-2 measured by cathodoluminescence mapping. Hall-effect measurements of p-GaN were carried out at a temperature in the range from 160 to 450 K. A low compensation ratio of less than 1% was revealed. We also obtained the depth of the Mg acceptor level of 235 meV considering the lowering effect by the Coulomb potential of ionized acceptors. The hole mobilities of 33 cm2 V-1 s-1 at 300 K and 72 cm2 V-1 s-1 at 200 K were observed in lightly doped p-GaN.

  7. Micro-Hall devices for magnetic, electric and photo-detection

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Gilbertson, A.; Sadeghi, H.; Panchal, V.; Kazakova, O.; Lambert, C. J.; Solin, S. A.; Cohen, L. F.

    Multifunctional mesoscopic sensors capable of detecting local magnetic (B) , electric (E) , and optical fields can greatly facilitate image capture in nano-arrays that address a multitude of disciplines. The use of micro-Hall devices as B-field sensors and, more recently as E-field sensors is well established. Here we report the real-space voltage response of InSb/AlInSb micro-Hall devices to not only local E-, and B-fields but also to photo-excitation using scanning probe microscopy. We show that the ultrafast generation of localised photocarriers results in conductance perturbations analogous to those produced by local E-fields. Our experimental results are in good agreement with tight-binding transport calculations in the diffusive regime. At room temperature, samples exhibit a magnetic sensitivity of >500 nT/ √Hz, an optical noise equivalent power of >20 pW/ √Hz (λ = 635 nm) comparable to commercial photoconductive detectors, and charge sensitivity of >0.04 e/ √Hz comparable to that of single electron transistors. Work done while on sabbatical from Washington University. Co-founder of PixelEXX, a start-up whose focus is imaging nano-arrays.

  8. Intrinsic Electron Mobility Exceeding 10³ cm²/(V s) in Multilayer InSe FETs.

    PubMed

    Sucharitakul, Sukrit; Goble, Nicholas J; Kumar, U Rajesh; Sankar, Raman; Bogorad, Zachary A; Chou, Fang-Cheng; Chen, Yit-Tsong; Gao, Xuan P A

    2015-06-10

    Graphene-like two-dimensional (2D) materials not only are interesting for their exotic electronic structure and fundamental electronic transport or optical properties but also hold promises for device miniaturization down to atomic thickness. As one material belonging to this category, InSe, a III-VI semiconductor, not only is a promising candidate for optoelectronic devices but also has potential for ultrathin field effect transistor (FET) with high mobility transport. In this work, various substrates such as PMMA, bare silicon oxide, passivated silicon oxide, and silicon nitride were used to fabricate multilayer InSe FET devices. Through back gating and Hall measurement in four-probe configuration, the device's field effect mobility and intrinsic Hall mobility were extracted at various temperatures to study the material's intrinsic transport behavior and the effect of dielectric substrate. The sample's field effect and Hall mobilities over the range of 20-300 K fall in the range of 0.1-2.0 × 10(3) cm(2)/(V s), which are comparable or better than the state of the art FETs made of widely studied 2D transition metal dichalcogenides.

  9. A Preliminary Investigation of Hall Thruster Technology

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Gallimore, Alec D.

    1997-01-01

    A three-year NASA/BMDO-sponsored experimental program to conduct performance and plume plasma property measurements on two Russian Stationary Plasma Thrusters (SPTs) has been completed. The program utilized experimental facilitates at the University of Michigan's Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory (PEPL). The main features of the proposed effort were as follows: (1) Characterized Hall thruster (and arcjet) performance by measuring ion exhaust velocity with probes at various thruster conditions; (2) Used a variety of probe diagnostics in the thruster plume to measure plasma properties and flow properties including T(sub e) and n(sub e) ion current density and ion energy distribution, and electric fields by mapping plasma potential; (3) Used emission spectroscopy to identify species within the plume and to measure electron temperatures. A key and unique feature of our research was our collaboration with Russian Hall thruster researcher Dr. Sergey A Khartov, Deputy Dean of International Relations at the Moscow Aviation Institute (MAI). His activities in this program included consulting on and participation in research at PEPL through use of a MAI-built SPT and ion energy probe.

  10. Hollow Cathode Assembly Development for the HERMeS Hall Thruster

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Sarver-Verhey, Timothy R.; Kamhawi, Hani; Goebel, Dan M.; Polk, James E.; Peterson, Peter Y.; Robinson, Dale A.

    2016-01-01

    To support the operation of the HERMeS 12.5 kW Hall Thruster for NASA's Asteroid Redirect Robotic Mission, hollow cathodes using emitters based on barium oxide impregnate and lanthanum hexaboride are being evaluated through wear-testing, performance characterization, plasma modeling, and review of integration requirements. This presentation will present the development approach used to assess the cathode emitter options. A 2,000-hour wear-test of development model Barium Oxide (BaO) hollow cathode is being performed as part of the development plan. Specifically this test is to identify potential impacts cathode emitter life during operation in the HERMeS thruster. The cathode was operated with a magnetic field-equipped anode that simulates the HERMeS hall thruster operating environment. Cathode discharge performance has been stable with the device accumulating 743 hours at the time of this report. Observed voltage changes are attributed to keeper surface condition changes during testing. Cathode behavior during characterization sweeps exhibited stable behavior, including cathode temperature. The details of the cathode assembly operation of the wear-test will be presented.

  11. Large anomalous Hall effect in Pt interfaced with perpendicular anisotropy ferrimagnetic insulator

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Tang, Chi; Sellappan, Pathikumar; Liu, Yawen; Garay, Javier; Shi, Jing; Shines Team

    We demonstrate the strain induced perpendicular magnetic anisotropy (PMA) in a ferrimagnetic insulator (FMI), Tm3Fe5O12 (TIG) and the first observation of large anomalous Hall effect (AHE) in TIG/Pt bilayers. Atomically flat TIG films were deposited by a laser molecular beam epitaxy system on (111)-orientated substituted gadolinium gallium garnet substrates. The strength of PMA could be effectively tuned by controlling the oxygen pressure during deposition. Sharp squared anomalous Hall hysteresis loops were observed in bilayers of TIG/Pt over a range of thicknesses of Pt, with the maximum AHE conductivity reaching 1 S/cm at room temperature. The AHE vanishes when a 5 nm Cu layer was inserted between Pt and TIG, strongly indicating the proximity-induced ferromagnetism in Pt. The large AHE in the bilayer structures demonstrates a potential use of PMA-FMI related heterostructures in spintronics. This work was supported as part of the SHINES, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences under Award # SC0012670.

  12. Activation energies for the ν=5/2 Fractional Quantum Hall Effect at 10 Tesla

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Zhang, Chi; Du, R. R.; Pfeiffer, L. N.; West, K. W.

    2010-03-01

    We reported on the low-temperature magnetotransport in a high-purity (mobility ˜ 1x10^7cm^2/Vs) modulation-doped GaAs/AlGaAs quantum well with a high electron density (6x10^11 cm-2). A quantized ν=5/2 Hall plateau is observed at B ˜ 10 T, with an activation gap δ5/2˜ 125±10 mK; the plateau can persist up to ˜ 25^o tilt-field. We determined the activation energies δ and quasi-gap energies δ^quasi for the ν=5/2, 7/3, and 8/3 fractional quantum Hall states in tilted-magnetic field (θ). The δ5/2, δ7/3 and the δ5/2^quasi , δ7/3^quasi are found to decrease in θ. We will present the systematic data and discuss their implications on the spin-polarization of ν=5/2 states observed at 10 T.[4pt] [1] R. Willett, Phys. Rev. Lett. 59, 1776 (1987).[0pt] [2] W. Pan et al, Solid State Commun. 119, 641 (2001).

  13. Cyclotron Orbits of Composite Fermions in the Fractional Quantum Hall Regime

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Jo, Insun; Deng, Hao; Liu, Yang; Pfeiffer, L. N.; West, K. W.; Baldwin, K. W.; Shayegan, M.

    2018-01-01

    We study a bilayer GaAs hole system that hosts two distinct many-body phases at low temperatures and high perpendicular magnetic fields. The higher-density (top) layer develops a Fermi sea of composite fermions (CFs) in its half-filled lowest Landau level, while the lower-density (bottom) layer forms a Wigner crystal (WC) as its filling becomes very small. Owing to the interlayer interaction, the CFs in the top layer feel the periodic Coulomb potential of the WC in the bottom layer. We measure the magnetoresistance of the top layer while changing the bottom-layer density. As the WC layer density increases, the resistance peaks separating the adjacent fractional quantum Hall states in the top layer change nonmonotonically and attain maximum values when the cyclotron orbit of the CFs encloses one WC lattice point. These features disappear at T =275 mK when the WC melts. The observation of such geometric resonance features is unprecedented and surprising as it implies that the CFs retain a well-defined cyclotron orbit and Fermi wave vector even deep in the fractional quantum Hall regime, far from half-filling.

  14. Prediction of a magnetic Weyl semimetal without spin-orbit coupling and strong anomalous Hall effect in the Heusler compensated ferrimagnet Ti2MnAl

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Shi, Wujun; Muechler, Lukas; Manna, Kaustuv; Zhang, Yang; Koepernik, Klaus; Car, Roberto; van den Brink, Jeroen; Felser, Claudia; Sun, Yan

    2018-02-01

    We predict a magnetic Weyl semimetal in the inverse Heusler Ti2MnAl , a compensated ferrimagnet with a vanishing net magnetic moment and a Curie temperature of over 650 K. Despite the vanishing net magnetic moment, we calculate a large intrinsic anomalous Hall effect (AHE) of about 300 S/cm. It derives from the Berry curvature distribution of the Weyl points, which are only 14 meV away from the Fermi level and isolated from trivial bands. Different from antiferromagnets Mn3X (X =Ge , Sn, Ga, Ir, Rh, and Pt), where the AHE originates from the noncollinear magnetic structure, the AHE in Ti2MnAl stems directly from the Weyl points and is topologically protected. The large anomalous Hall conductivity (AHC) together with a low charge carrier concentration should give rise to a large anomalous Hall angle. In contrast to the Co-based ferromagnetic Heusler compounds, the Weyl nodes in Ti2MnAl do not derive from nodal lines due to the lack of mirror symmetries in the inverse Heusler structure. Since the magnetic structure breaks spin-rotation symmetry, the Weyl nodes are stable without SOC. Moreover, because of the large separation between Weyl points of opposite topological charge, the Fermi arcs extent up to 75 % of the reciprocal lattice vectors in length. This makes Ti2MnAl an excellent candidate for the comprehensive study of magnetic Weyl semimetals. It is the first example of a material with Weyl points, large anomalous Hall effect, and angle despite a vanishing net magnetic moment.

  15. Status of power generation experiments in the NASA Lewis closed cycle MHD facility

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Sovie, R. J.; Nichols, L. D.

    1971-01-01

    The design and operation of the closed cycle MHD facility is discussed and results obtained in recent experiments are presented. The main components of the facility are a compressor, recuperative heat exchanger, heater, nozzle, MHD channel with 28 pairs of thoriated tungsten electrodes, cesium condenser, and an argon cooler. The facility has been operated at temperatures up to 2100 K with a cesium-seeded argon working fluid. At low magnetic field strengths, the open circuit voltage, Hall voltage and short circuit current obtained are 90, 69, and 47 percent of the theoretical equilibrium values, respectively. Comparison of this data with a wall and boundary layer leakage theory indicates that the generator has shorting paths in the Hall direction.

  16. Observation of the Quantum Hall Effect in Confined Films of the Three-Dimensional Dirac Semimetal Cd3 As2

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Schumann, Timo; Galletti, Luca; Kealhofer, David A.; Kim, Honggyu; Goyal, Manik; Stemmer, Susanne

    2018-01-01

    The magnetotransport properties of epitaxial films of Cd3 As2 , a paradigm three-dimensional Dirac semimetal, are investigated. We show that an energy gap opens in the bulk electronic states of sufficiently thin films and, at low temperatures, carriers residing in surface states dominate the electrical transport. The carriers in these states are sufficiently mobile to give rise to a quantized Hall effect. The sharp quantization demonstrates surface transport that is virtually free of parasitic bulk conduction and paves the way for novel quantum transport studies in this class of topological materials. Our results also demonstrate that heterostructuring approaches can be used to study and engineer quantum states in topological semimetals.

  17. Numerical study for peristalsis of Carreau-Yasuda nanomaterial with convective and zero mass flux condition

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Hayat, T.; Ahmed, Bilal; Alsaedi, A.; Abbasi, F. M.

    2018-03-01

    The present communication investigates flow of Carreau-Yasuda nanofluid in presence of mixed convection and Hall current. Effects of viscous dissipation, Ohmic heating and convective conditions are addressed. In addition zero nanoparticle mass flux condition is imposed. Wave frame analysis is carried out. Coupled differential systems after long wavelength and low Reynolds number are numerically solved. Effects of different parameters on velocity, temperature and concentration are studied. Heat and mass transfer rates are analyzed through tabular values. It is observed that concentration for thermophoresis and Brownian motion parameters has opposite effect. Further heat and mass transfer rates at the upper wall enhances significantly when Hartman number increases and reverse situation is noticed for Hall parameter.

  18. Magnetic Chern bands and triplon Hall effect in an extended Shastry-Sutherland model

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Malki, M.; Schmidt, K. P.

    2017-05-01

    We study topological properties of one-triplon bands in an extended Shastry-Sutherland model relevant for the frustrated quantum magnet SrCu2(BO3)2 . To this end perturbative continuous unitary transformations are applied about the isolated dimer limit allowing us to calculate the one-triplon dispersion up to high order in various couplings including intra- and interdimer Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interactions and a general uniform magnetic field. We determine the Berry curvature and the Chern number of the different one-triplon bands. We demonstrate the occurrence of Chern numbers ±1 and ±2 for the case that two components of the magnetic field are finite. Finally, we also calculate the triplon Hall effect arising at finite temperatures.

  19. Magnon Hall effect on the Lieb lattice.

    PubMed

    Cao, Xiaodong; Chen, Kai; He, Dahai

    2015-04-29

    Ferromagnetic insulators without inversion symmetry may show magnon Hall effect (MHE) in the presence of a temperature gradient due to the existence of Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI). In this theoretical study, we investigate MHE on a lattice with inversion symmetry, namely the Lieb lattice, where the DMI is introduced by adding an external electric field. We show the nontrivial topology of this model by examining the existence of edge states and computing the topological phase diagram characterized by the Chern numbers of different bands. Together with the topological phase diagram, we can further determine the sign and magnitude of the transverse thermal conductivity. The impact of the flat band possessed by this model on the thermal conductivity is discussed by computing the Berry curvature analytically.

  20. Solid state switch panel. [determination of optimum transducer type for required switches

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Beenfeldt, E.

    1973-01-01

    An intensive study of various forms of transducers was conducted with application towards hermetically sealing the transducer and all electronics. The results of the study indicated that the Hall effect devices and a LED/phototransistor combination were the most practical for this type of application. Therefore, hardware was developed utilizing a magnet/Hall effect transducer for single action switches and LED/phototransistor transducers for rotary multiposition or potentiometer applications. All electronics could be housed in a hermetically sealed compartment. A number of switches were built and models were hermetically sealed to prove the feasibility of this type of fabrication. One of each type of switch was subjected to temperature cycling, vibration, and EMI tests. The results of these tests are presented.

  1. A Preliminary Investigation of Hall Thruster Technology

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Gallimore, Alec D.

    1997-01-01

    A three-year, NASA/BMDO-sponsored experimental program to conduct performance and plume plasma property measurements on two Russian Stationary Plasma Thrusters (SPTs) has been completed. The program utilized experimental facilitates at the University of Michigan's Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory (PEPL). The main features of the proposed effort were as follows: We Characterized Hall thruster [and arcjet] performance by measuring ion exhaust velocity with probes at various thruster conditions. Used a variety of probe diagnostics in the thruster plume to measure plasma properties and flow properties including T(sub e) and n(sub e), ion current density and ion energy distribution, and electric fields by mapping plasma potential. Used emission spectroscopy to identify species within the plume and to measure electron temperatures.

  2. Reversible electrical-field control of magnetization and anomalous Hall effect in Co/PMN-PT hybrid heterostructures

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Wang, J.; Huang, Q. K.; Lu, S. Y.; Tian, Y. F.; Chen, Y. X.; Bai, L. H.; Dai, Y.; Yan, S. S.

    2018-04-01

    Room-temperature reversible electrical-field control of the magnetization and the anomalous Hall effect was reported in hybrid multiferroic heterojunctions based on Co/Pb(Mg1/3Nb2/3)0.7Ti0.3O3 (PMN-PT). We demonstrate herein that electrical-field-induced strain and oxygen-ion migration in ZnO/Co/PMN-PT junctions exert opposing effects on the magnetic properties of the Co sublayer, and the competition between these effects determines the final magnitude of magnetization. This proof-of-concept investigation opens an alternative way to optimize and enhance the electrical-field effect on magnetism through the combination of multiple electrical manipulation mechanisms in hybrid multiferroic devices.

  3. Quasi-particle properties from tunneling in the v = 5/2 fractional quantum Hall state.

    PubMed

    Radu, Iuliana P; Miller, J B; Marcus, C M; Kastner, M A; Pfeiffer, L N; West, K W

    2008-05-16

    Quasi-particles with fractional charge and statistics, as well as modified Coulomb interactions, exist in a two-dimensional electron system in the fractional quantum Hall (FQH) regime. Theoretical models of the FQH state at filling fraction v = 5/2 make the further prediction that the wave function can encode the interchange of two quasi-particles, making this state relevant for topological quantum computing. We show that bias-dependent tunneling across a narrow constriction at v = 5/2 exhibits temperature scaling and, from fits to the theoretical scaling form, extract values for the effective charge and the interaction parameter of the quasi-particles. Ranges of values obtained are consistent with those predicted by certain models of the 5/2 state.

  4. L'effet Hall Quantique

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Samson, Thomas

    Nous proposons une methode permettant d'obtenir une expression pour la conductivite de Hall de structures electroniques bidimensionnelles et nous examinons celle -ci a la limite d'une temperature nulle dans le but de verifier l'effet Hall quantique. Nous allons nous interesser essentiellement a l'effet Hall quantique entier et aux effets fractionnaires inferieurs a un. Le systeme considere est forme d'un gaz d'electrons en interaction faible avec les impuretes de l'echantillon. Le modele du gaz d'electrons consiste en un gaz bidimensionnel d'electrons sans spin expose perpendiculairement a un champ magnetique uniforme. Ce dernier est decrit par le potentiel vecteur vec{rm A} defini dans la jauge de Dingle ou jauge symetrique. Conformement au formalisme de la seconde quantification, l'hamiltonien de ce gaz est represente dans la base des etats a un-corps de Dingle |n,m> et exprime ainsi en terme des operateurs de creation et d'annihilation correspondants a_sp{ rm n m}{dag} et a _{rm n m}. Nous supposons de plus que les electrons du niveau fondamental de Dingle interagissent entre eux via le potentiel coulombien. La methode utilisee fait appel a une equation mai tresse a N-corps, de nature quantique et statistique, et verifiant le second principe de la thermodynamique. A partir de celle-ci, nous obtenons un systeme d'equations differentielles appele hierarchie d'equations quantique dont la resolution nous permet de determiner une equation a un-corps, dite de Boltzmann quantique, et dictant l'evolution de la moyenne statistique de l'operateur non-diagonal a _sp{rm n m}{dag } a_{rm n}, _{rm m}, sous l'action du champ electrique applique vec{rm E}(t). C'est sa solution Tr(p(t) a _sp{rm n m}{dag} a_{rm n},_ {rm m}), qui definit la relation de convolution entre la densite courant de Hall vec{rm J}_{rm H }(t) et le champ electrique vec {rm E}(t) dont la transformee de Laplace-Fourier du noyau nous fournit l'expression de la conductivite de Hall desiree. Pour une valeur de facteur d'occupation (nombre d'electrons/degenerescence des etats de Dingle) superieure a un, c'est-a-dire en absence d'interaction electron-electron, il nous sera facile d'evaluer cette conductivite a la limite d'une temperature nulle et de demontrer qu'elle tend vers l'une des valeurs quantiques qe^2/h conformement a l'effet Hall quantique entier. Cependant, pour une valeur du facteur d'occupation inferieure a un, c'est-a-dire en presence d'interaction electron-electron, nous ne pourrons evaluer cette limite et obtenir les resultats escomptes a cause de l'impossibilite de determiner l'un des termes impliques. Neanmoins, ce dernier etant de nature statistique, il pourra etre aisement mis en fonction du propagateur du gaz d'electrons dont on doit maintenant determiner une expression en regime effet Hall quantique fractionnaire. Apres avoir demontre l'impuissance de la theorie des perturbations, basee sur le theoreme de Wick et la technique des diagrammes de Feynman, a accomplir cette tache correctement, nous proposons une seconde methode. Celle -ci fait appel au formalisme de l'integrale fonctionnelle et a l'utilisation d'une transformation de Hubbard-Stratonovich generalisee permettant de substituer a l'interaction a deux-corps une interaction effective a un-corps. L'expression finale obtenue bien que non completement resolue, devrait pouvoir etre estimee par une bonne approximation analytique ou au pire numeriquement.

  5. Hole Scattering in GaSb: Scattering on Space Charge Regions Versus Dipole Scattering

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Pődör, B.

    2006-11-01

    Hole concentration and mobility were investigated by Hall measurements in nominally undoped p-type GaSb in the temperature range from 77 to 300 K. The dependence of the thermal ionization energy of native acceptors on the acceptor centre concentration and on the compensation degree was determined. The temperature dependence of the hole mobility was analyzed using a heuristic semi-empirical model as well as using a phenomenological two-hole band model. Space charge scattering and/or dipole scattering described with a mobility contribution with a ˜ T-1/2 like temperature dependence dominated the hole mobility in the investigated temperature range.

  6. Familial Pallister-Hall in adulthood.

    PubMed

    Talsania, Mitali; Sharma, Rohan; Sughrue, Michael E; Scofield, R Hal; Lim, Jonea

    2017-10-01

    Pallister Hall syndrome is autosomal dominant disorder usually diagnosed in infants and children. Current diagnostic criteria include presence of hypothalamic hamartoma, post axial polydactyly and positive family history, but the disease has variable manifestations. Herein we report Pallister Hall syndrome diagnosed in a family where both patients were adults. A 59 year old man developed seizures 4 years prior to our evaluation of him, at which time imaging showed a hypothalamic hamartoma. The seizures were controlled medically. He did well until he had visual changes after a traumatic head injury. Repeat MRI showed slight expansion of the mass with formal visual field testing demonstrating bitemporal hemianopsia. There was no evidence of pituitary dysfunction except for large urine volume. He underwent surgery to debulk the hamartoma and the visual field defects improved. There was no hypopituitarism post-operatively, and the polydyspia resolved. His 29 year old daughter also had seizures and hypothalamic hamartoma. Both patients had had polydactyly with prior surgical correction in childhood. The daughter underwent genetic testing, which revealed a previously undescribed heterozygous single base pair deletion in exon 13 of the GLI3 gene causing a frameshift mutation. Further investigation into family history revealed multiple members in previous generations with polydactyly and/or seizures. Pallister-Hall syndrome is caused by an inherited autosomal dominant or de novo mutation in GLI3 gene. This rare syndrome has not had prevalence defined, however. Generally, diagnoses are made in the pediatric population. Our report adds to the few cases detected in adulthood.

  7. Cooper Pair-Like Systems at High Temperature and their Role on Fluctuations Near the Critical Temperature

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ausloos, M.; Dorbolo, S.

    A logarithmic behavior is hidden in the linear temperature regime of the electrical resistivity R(T) of some YBCO sample below 2Tc where "pairs" break apart, fluctuations occur and "a gap is opening". An anomalous effect also occurs near 200 K in the normal state Hall coefficient. In a simulation of oxygen diffusion in planar 123 YBCO, an anomalous behavior is found in the oxygen-vacancy motion near such a temperature. We claim that the behavior of the specific heat above and near the critical temperature should be reexamined in order to show the influence and implications of fluctuations and dimensionality on the nature of the phase transition and on the true onset temperature.

  8. Efficacy of Adjunctive Sleep Interventions for PTSD

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-03-01

    MURI; BAA 08-019: Topic #1; PI: M. Hall, University of Pittsburgh). This multidisciplinary translational project focuses on investigating sleep...rate variability (high & low frequency) CAPS Part 2 PTSD symptom checklist (civilian version) Beck Depression Inventory Beck Anxiety...be completed by a CNRC RN) PTSD symptom checklist (civilian version) Beck Depression Inventory Beck Anxiety Inventory Inventory of

  9. New Technologies for Enhanced Environmental Testing on Spacecraft Structures

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ascani, Maurizio; Alemanno, Leonardo; Rinalducci, Fabrizio

    2014-06-01

    This paper presents engineering approaches to realize Thermal Vacuum Chambers (TVC) for different R&D applications: (1) testing of propulsion systems, operating as a Hall thruster, (2) increasing of the DUT (device under test) surface temperature up to +550°C, (3) installation of the solar system inside the TVC. Each application implies specific problems that need to be managed by TVC during the tests. In particular, emission of high-energy ionized gas at high temperatures, surface temperatures higher 800 K and optical specimen contamination represent under high vacuum conditions significant challenges for test equipment.

  10. Intrinsic Dirac half-metal and quantum anomalous Hall phase in a hexagonal metal-oxide lattice

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Zhang, Shou-juan; Zhang, Chang-wen; Zhang, Shu-feng; Ji, Wei-xiao; Li, Ping; Wang, Pei-ji; Li, Sheng-shi; Yan, Shi-shen

    2017-11-01

    The quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) effect has attracted extensive attention due to time-reversal symmetry broken by a staggered magnetic flux emerging from ferromagnetic ordering and spin-orbit coupling. However, the experimental observations of the QAH effect are still challenging due to its small nontrivial bulk gap. Here, based on density functional theory and Berry curvature calculations, we propose the realization of intrinsic QAH effect in two-dimensional hexagonal metal-oxide lattice, N b2O3 , which is characterized by the nonzero Chern number (C =1 ) and chiral edge states. Spin-polarized calculations indicate that it exhibits a Dirac half-metal feature with temperature as large as TC=392 K using spin-wave theory. When the spin-orbit coupling is switched on, N b2O3 becomes a QAH insulator. Notably, the nontrivial topology is robust against biaxial strain with its band gap reaching up to Eg=75 meV , which is far beyond room temperature. A tight-binding model is further constructed to understand the origin of nontrivially electronic properties. Our findings on the Dirac half-metal and room-temperature QAH effect in the N b2O3 lattice can serve as an ideal platform for developing future topotronics devices.

  11. Spin-Hall magnetoresistance in multidomain helical spiral systems

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Aqeel, A.; Mostovoy, M.; van Wees, B. J.; Palstra, T. T. M.

    2017-05-01

    We study the spin-Hall magnetoresistance (SMR) in multidomain helical spiral magnet Cu2OSeO{{}3}| Pt heterostructures. We compare the SMR response of Cu2OSeO3 at 5 K, when the magnetic domains are almost frozen, to that at elevated temperatures, when domain walls move easily. At 5 K the SMR amplitude vanishes at low applied magnetic fields, while at 50 K it does not. This phenomenon can be explained by the effect of the magnetic field on the domain structure of Cu2OSeO3. At elevated temperatures the system can reach the thermodynamic equilibrium state, in which a single domain that has a minimal energy for a given field direction occupies the whole sample and gives rise to a nonzero SMR signal. In contrast at 5 K, the three types of domains with mutually orthogonal spiral wave vectors have equal volumes independent of the field direction, which leads to the cancellation of the SMR signal at low fields. In the single-domain conical spiral and collinear ferrimagnetic states, the angular and field dependence of the SMR is found to be same at all temperatures (T≤slant 50 K). This behavior can be understood within the framework of the SMR theory developed for collinear magnets.

  12. DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Mun, Eundeok; Bud'ko, Sergey L.; Canfield, Paul C.

    We present the magnetic field dependencies of transport properties for RPtBi ( R = Gd, Dy, Tm, and Lu) half-Heusler compounds. Temperature- and field-dependent resistivity measurements of high-quality RPtBi single crystals reveal an unusually large, nonsaturating magnetoresistance (MR) up to 300 K under a moderate magnetic field of H = 140 kOe. At 300 K, the large MR effect decreases as the rare earth is traversed from Gd to Lu and the magnetic field dependence of MR shows a deviation from the conventional H2 behavior. The Hall coefficient ( RH) for R = Gd indicates a sign change around 120more » K, whereas RH curves for R = Dy, Tm, and Lu remain positive for all measured temperatures. At 300 K, the Hall resistivity reveals a deviation from the linear field dependence for all compounds. Thermoelectric power measurements on this family show strong temperature and magnetic field dependencies which are consistent with resistivity measurements. A highly enhanced thermoelectric power under applied magnetic field is observed as high as ~100 μV/K at 140 kOe. Furthermore, analysis of the transport data in this series reveals that the rare-earth-based half-Heusler compounds provide opportunities to tune MR effect through lanthanide contraction and to elucidate the mechanism of nontrivial MR.« less

  13. Clusters of Point Defects Near Dislocations as a Tool to Control CdZnTe Electrical Parameters by Ultrasound

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Olikh, Ya. M.; Tymochko, M. D.; Olikh, O. Ya.; Shenderovsky, V. A.

    2018-05-01

    We studied the temperature dependence (77-300 K) of the electron concentration and mobility using the Hall method under ultrasound (the acoustic Hall method) to determine the mechanisms by which ultrasound influences the electrical activity of near-dislocation clusters in n-type low-ohmic Cd1-x Zn x Te single crystals (N Cl ≈ 1024 m-3; x = 0; 0.04) with different dislocation density (0.4-5.1) × 1010 m-2. Changes in electrophysical parameters were found to occur as a function of temperature and ultrasound intensity. To evaluate the relative contribution of different charge carrier scattering mechanisms (lattice scattering, ionized impurity scattering, neutral impurity scattering, and dislocation scattering) and their change under ultrasound, a differential evolution method was used. This method made it possible to analyze experimental mobility μ H(T) by its nonlinear approximation with characteristic temperature dependence for each mechanism. An increase in neutral impurity scattering and a decrease in ionized impurity and dislocation scattering components were observed under ultrasound. The character and the amount of these acoustically induced changes correlate with particular sample dislocation characteristics. It was concluded that the observed effects are related to the acoustically induced transformation of the point-defect structure, mainly in the near dislocation crystal regions.

  14. Effect of growth pressure on the morphology evolution and doping characteristics in nonpolar a-plane GaN

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Song, Keun Man; Kim, Jong Min; Kang, Bong Kyun; Shin, Chan Soo; Ko, Chul Gi; Kong, Bo Hyun; Cho, Hyung Koun; Yoon, Dae Ho; Kim, Hogyoung; Hwang, Sung Min

    2012-02-01

    Nonpolar a-plane GaN layers grown on r-plane sapphire substrates were examined by using a two-step growth process. The higher initial growth pressure for the nucleation layer resulted in the improved crystalline quality with lower density of both threading dislocations and basal stacking faults. This was attributed to the higher degree of initial roughening and recovery time via a growth mode transition from three-dimensional (3D) to quasi two-dimensional (2D) lateral growth. Using Hall-effect measurements, the overgrown Si doped GaN layers grown with higher initial growth pressure were found to have higher mobility. The scattering mechanism due to the dislocations was dominant especially at low temperature (<200 K) for the lower initial growth pressure, which was insignificant for the higher initial growth pressure. The temperature-dependent Hall-effect measurements for the Mg doped GaN with a higher initial growth pressure yielded the activation energy and the acceptor concentration to be 128 meV and 1.2 × 1019 cm-3, respectively, corresponding to about 3.6% of activation at room temperature. Two-step growth scheme with a higher initial growth pressure is suggested as a potential method to improve the performance of nonpolar a-plane GaN based devices.

  15. Mounting Thin Samples For Electrical Measurements

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Matus, L. G.; Summers, R. L.

    1988-01-01

    New method for mounting thin sample for electrical measurements involves use of vacuum chuck to hold a ceramic mounting plate, which holds sample. Contacts on mounting plate establish electrical connection to sample. Used to make electrical measurements over temperature range from 77 to 1,000 K and does not introduce distortions into magnetic field during Hall measurements.

  16. Atomic Layer-Deposited Titanium-Doped Vanadium Oxide Thin Films and Their Thermistor Applications

    DOE PAGES

    Wang, Shuyu; Yu, Shifeng; Lu, Ming; ...

    2016-11-30

    In this paper, we report the enhancement in the temperature coefficient of resistance (TCR) of atomic layer-deposited vanadium oxide thin films through the doping of titanium oxide. The Hall effect measurement provides a potential explanation for the phenomenon. The composition and morphology of the thin films are investigated by x-ray diffraction and scanning electron microscopy techniques. The high TCR, good uniformity, and low processing temperature of the material make it a good candidate for thermistor application.

  17. Mode Transitions in Hall Effect Thrusters

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2013-07-01

    bM = number of pixels per bin m = spoke order 0m = spoke order m = 0 em = electron mass, 9.1110 -31 kg im = Xe ion mass, 2.18×10 -25...periodogram spectral estimate, Arb Hz -1 eT = electron temperature eT = electron temperature parallel to magnetic field, eV eT  = electron ...Fourier transform of x(t)  = inverse angle from 2D DFT, deg-1  = mean electron energy, eV * = material dependent cross-over energy, eV xy

  18. Temperature Dependent Resistivity and Hall Effect in Proton Irradiated CdS Thin Films

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Guster, B.; Ghenescu, V.; Ion, L.; Radu, A.; Porumb, O.; Antohe, S.

    2011-10-01

    Cadmium sulphide finds extensive applications in a variety of optoelectronic devices. In particular, CdS thin films are suitable for use as windows in heterojunction solar cells that employ CdTe, Cu2S or CuInSe2 as an absorber. Such thin film based solar cells are well suited for use in space technology. For that specific application, it is important to know how ionizing radiations alter their performance. We have investigated the effects of irradiation with high energy protons (3 MeV), at 1014 fluency, on electrical properties of polycrystalline CdS thin layers. The samples were prepared by thermal vacuum deposition from single source onto optical glass substrate. Temperature dependent electrical resistivity and Hall effect, before and after irradiation, were recorded from 300 K down to 4 K. The experimental results can be explained in the frame of a two-band model. Above 100 K electrical properties are controlled by a defect level of donor type, with an ionization energy of about 0.060 eV. The possible origin of this defect is discussed.

  19. Phase transitions, magnetotransport and magnetocaloric effects in a new family of quaternary Ni-Mn-In-Z Heusler alloys.

    PubMed

    Kazakov, Alexander; Prudnikov, Valerii; Granovsky, Alexander; Perov, Nikolai; Dubenko, Igor; Pathak, Arjun Kumar; Samanta, Tapas; Stadler, Shane; Ali, Naushad; Zhukov, Arcady; Ilyin, Maxim; Gonzalez, Julian

    2012-09-01

    The magnetic, magnetotransport, and magnetocaloric properties near compound phase transitions in Ni50Mn35In14Z (Z = In, Ge, Al), and Ni48Co2Mn35In15 Heusler alloys have been studied using VSM and SQUID magnetometers (at magnetic fields (H) up to 5 T), four-probe method (at H = 0.005-1.5 T), and an adiabatic magnetocalorimeter (for H changes up to deltaH = 1.8 T), respectively. The martensitic transformation (MT) is accompanied by large magnetoresistance (up to 70%), a significant change in resistivity (up to 200%), and a sign reversal of the ordinary Hall effect coefficient, all related to a strong change in the electronic spectrum at the MT. The field dependences of the Hall resistance are complex in the vicinity of the MT, indicating a change in the relative concentrations of the austenite and martensite phases at strong fields. Negative and positive changes in adiabatic temperatures of about -2 K and +2 K have been observed in the vicinity of MT and Curie temperatures, respectively, for deltaH = 1.8 T.

  20. Dislocation blocking by AlGaN hot electron injecting layer in the epitaxial growth of GaN terahertz Gunn diode

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Li, Liang; Yang, Lin'an; Zhang, Jincheng; Hao, Yue

    2013-09-01

    This paper reports an efficient method to improve the crystal quality of GaN Gunn diode with AlGaN hot electron injecting layer (HEI). An evident reduction of screw dislocation and edge dislocation densities is achieved by the strain management and the enhanced lateral growth in high temperature grown AlGaN HEI layer. Compared with the top hot electron injecting layer (THEI) structure, the bottom hot electron injecting layer (BHEI) structure enhances the crystal quality of transit region due to the growth sequence modulation of HEI layer. A high Hall mobility of 2934 cm2/Vs at 77 K, a nearly flat downtrend of Hall mobility at the temperature ranging from 300 to 573 K, a low intensity of ratio of yellow luminescence band to band edge emission, a narrow band edge emission line-width, and a smooth surface morphology are observed for the BHEI structural epitaxy of Gunn diode, which indicates that AlGaN BHEI structure is a promising candidate for fabrication of GaN Gunn diodes in terahertz regime.

  1. Investigation on structural, optical and electrical properties of Cp2Mg flow varied p-GaN grown by MOCVD

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Surender, S.; Pradeep, S.; Ramesh, R.; Baskar, K.

    2016-05-01

    In this work the effect of different concentration of Magnesium doped GaN (p-GaN) were systematically studied. The p-GaN epilayers were grown on c-plane sapphire substrate by horizontal flow Metal Organic Chemical Vapor Deposition (MOCVD) with various flow rates of 100 sccm to 300 sccm using bis-(cyclopentadienyl) - magnesium (Cp2Mg) precursor. The samples were subjected to structural, optical, morphological and electrical studies using High Resolution X-ray diffraction (HRXRD), room temperature photoluminescence (PL), Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) and Hall measurement respectively. Results indicated that the Mg doped GaN of 200 sccm Cp2Mg has the root mean square (rms) roughness of about 0.3 nm for a scan area of 5×5 µm2 which has good two dimensional growth. Moreover, Hall measurements results shows that (200 sccm Cp2Mg) Mg-doped GaN possess the highest hole concentration of 5.4×1017cm-3 and resistivity of 1.7 Ωcm at room temperature.

  2. Investigation on structural, optical and electrical properties of Cp2Mg flow varied p-GaN grown by MOCVD

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Surender, S.; Pradeep, S.; Ramesh, R.

    2016-05-23

    In this work the effect of different concentration of Magnesium doped GaN (p-GaN) were systematically studied. The p-GaN epilayers were grown on c-plane sapphire substrate by horizontal flow Metal Organic Chemical Vapor Deposition (MOCVD) with various flow rates of 100 sccm to 300 sccm using bis-(cyclopentadienyl) - magnesium (Cp2Mg) precursor. The samples were subjected to structural, optical, morphological and electrical studies using High Resolution X-ray diffraction (HRXRD), room temperature photoluminescence (PL), Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) and Hall measurement respectively. Results indicated that the Mg doped GaN of 200 sccm Cp2Mg has the root mean square (rms) roughness of about 0.3more » nm for a scan area of 5×5 µm{sup 2} which has good two dimensional growth. Moreover, Hall measurements results shows that (200 sccm Cp2Mg) Mg-doped GaN possess the highest hole concentration of 5.4×10{sup 17}cm{sup −3} and resistivity of 1.7 Ωcm at room temperature.« less

  3. Sequential PLD in oxygen/argon gas mixture of Al-doped ZnO thin films with improved electrical and optical properties

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Coman, Tudor; Timpu, Daniel; Nica, Valentin; Vitelaru, Catalin; Rambu, Alicia Petronela; Stoian, George; Olaru, Mihaela; Ursu, Cristian

    2017-10-01

    Highly conductive transparent Al-doped ZnO (AZO) thin films were obtained at room temperature through sequential PLD (SPLD) from Zn and Al metallic targets in an oxygen/argon gas mixture. We have investigated the structural, electrical and optical properties as a function of the oxygen/argon pressure ratio in the chamber. The measured Hall carrier concentration was found to increase with argon injection from 1.3 × 1020 to 6.7 × 1020 cm-3, while the laser shots ratio for Al/Zn targets ablation was kept constant. This increase was attributed to an enhancement of the substitution doping into the ZnO lattice. The argon injection also leads to an increase of the Hall mobility up to 20 cm2 V-1 s-1, attributed to a reduction of interstitial-type defects. Thus, the approach of using an oxygen/argon gas mixture during SPLD from metallic targets allows obtaining at room temperature AZO samples with high optical transmittance (about 90%) and low electrical resistivity (down to 5.1 × 10-4 Ω cm).

  4. Noise in tunneling spin current across coupled quantum spin chains

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Aftergood, Joshua; Takei, So

    2018-01-01

    We theoretically study the spin current and its dc noise generated between two spin-1 /2 spin chains weakly coupled at a single site in the presence of an over-population of spin excitations and a temperature elevation in one subsystem relative to the other, and we compare the corresponding transport quantities across two weakly coupled magnetic insulators hosting magnons. In the spin chain scenario, we find that applying a temperature bias exclusively leads to a vanishing spin current and a concomitant divergence in the spin Fano factor, defined as the spin current noise-to-signal ratio. This divergence is shown to have an exact analogy to the physics of electron scattering between fractional quantum Hall edge states and not to arise in the magnon scenario. We also reveal a suppression in the spin current noise that exclusively arises in the spin chain scenario due to the fermion nature of the spin-1/2 operators. We discuss how the spin Fano factor may be extracted experimentally via the inverse spin Hall effect used extensively in spintronics.

  5. Temperature-Induced Topological Phase Transition in HgTe Quantum Wells

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kadykov, A. M.; Krishtopenko, S. S.; Jouault, B.; Desrat, W.; Knap, W.; Ruffenach, S.; Consejo, C.; Torres, J.; Morozov, S. V.; Mikhailov, N. N.; Dvoretskii, S. A.; Teppe, F.

    2018-02-01

    We report a direct observation of temperature-induced topological phase transition between the trivial and topological insulator states in an HgTe quantum well. By using a gated Hall bar device, we measure and represent Landau levels in fan charts at different temperatures, and we follow the temperature evolution of a peculiar pair of "zero-mode" Landau levels, which split from the edge of electronlike and holelike subbands. Their crossing at a critical magnetic field Bc is a characteristic of inverted band structure in the quantum well. By measuring the temperature dependence of Bc, we directly extract the critical temperature Tc at which the bulk band gap vanishes and the topological phase transition occurs. Above this critical temperature, the opening of a trivial gap is clearly observed.

  6. Multi-band analysis of temperature-dependent transport coefficients (conductivity, Hall, Seebeck, and Nernst) of Ni-doped CoSb3

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kajikawa, Y.

    2016-02-01

    The experimental data on the temperature dependence of the four transport coefficients, i.e., the electrical conductivity (σ), Hall coefficient (RH), Seebeck coefficient (S), and Nernst coefficient (Q), of n-type Co0.999Ni0.001Sb3 reported by Sun et al. [Nat. Commun. 6, 7475 (2015)] have been analyzed in a multi-band model, especially focusing on the low temperature data. The multi-band model includes not only the lowest valley of the conduction band at the Γ point but also satellite valleys at the second minima together with an impurity band. The lowest valley at the Γ point is assumed to split into the c1 band and the spin-orbit split-off (so) band. For the analysis, the general expression of the Nernst coefficient in the multi-band model is derived. At such low temperatures that the other bands than the c1 and the impurity band can be neglected, this expression is shown to be approximated as the sum of three terms: the intrinsic terms due to the Nernst coefficients in the two bands themselves and a cross term proportional to the difference of Seebeck coefficients between the two bands. As a result of the analysis, it is proved that the anomalous positive peak of S(T) observed around T = 20 K as well as the sharp rise of the Hall mobility observed from 15 K to 40 K are due to the transition from hopping conduction in the impurity band to conduction in the c1 band. On the other hand, the pronounced peak of Q(T) observed slightly below 40 K is proved to be due to the cross term between the impurity band and the c1 band. In addition, a shoulder of Q(T) appeared around T = 80 K lends clear evidence of the existence of the so band, while the increase in both of σ(T) and | S ( T ) | above 150 K suggests the existence of the satellite valleys.

  7. High-Operating Temperature HgCdTe: A Vision for the Near Future

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Lee, D.; Carmody, M.; Piquette, E.; Dreiske, P.; Chen, A.; Yulius, A.; Edwall, D.; Bhargava, S.; Zandian, M.; Tennant, W. E.

    2016-09-01

    We review recent advances in the HgCdTe material quality and detector performance achieved at Teledyne using molecular beam epitaxy growth and the double-layer planar hetero-junction (DLPH) detector architecture. By using an un-doped, fully depleted absorber, Teledyne's DLPH architecture can be extended for use in high operating temperatures and other applications. We assess the potential achievable performance for long wavelength infrared (LWIR) hetero-junction p-lightly-doped n or p-intrinsic- n (p-i-n) detectors based on recently reported results for 10.7 μm cutoff 1 K × 1 K focal plane arrays (FPAs) tested at temperatures down to 30 K. Variable temperature dark current measurements show that any Shockley-Read-Hall currents in the depletion region of these devices have lifetimes that are reproducibly greater than 100 ms. Under the assumption of comparable lifetimes at higher temperatures, it is predicted that fully-depleted background radiation-limited performance can be expected for 10- μm cutoff detectors from room temperature to well below liquid nitrogen temperatures, with room-temperature dark current nearly 400 times lower than predicted by Rule 07. The hetero-junction p-i-n diode is shown to have numerous other significant potential advantages including minimal or no passivation requirements for pBn-like processing, low 1/ f noise, compatibility with small pixel pitch while maintaining high modulation transfer function, low crosstalk and good quantum efficiency. By appropriate design of the FPA dewar shielding, analysis shows that dark current can theoretically be further reduced below the thermal equilibrium radiative limit. Modeling shows that background radiation-limited LWIR HgCdTe operating with f/1 optics has the potential to operate within √2 of background-limited performance at 215 K. By reducing the background radiation by 2/3 using novel shielding methods, operation with a single-stage thermo-electric-cooler may be possible. If the background radiation can be reduced by 90%, then room-temperature operation is possible.

  8. Influence of Triply-Charged Ions and Ionization Cross-Sections in a Hybrid-PIC Model of a Hall Thruster Discharge

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Smith, Brandon D.; Boyd, Iain D.; Kamhawi, Hani

    2014-01-01

    The sensitivity of xenon ionization rates to collision cross-sections is studied within the framework of a hybrid-PIC model of a Hall thruster discharge. A revised curve fit based on the Drawin form is proposed and is shown to better reproduce the measured crosssections at high electron energies, with differences in the integrated rate coefficients being on the order of 10% for electron temperatures between 20 eV and 30 eV. The revised fit is implemented into HPHall and the updated model is used to simulate NASA's HiVHAc EDU2 Hall thruster at discharge voltages of 300, 400, and 500 V. For all three operating points, the revised cross-sections result in an increase in the predicted thrust and anode efficiency, reducing the error relative to experimental performance measurements. Electron temperature and ionization reaction rates are shown to follow the trends expected based on the integrated rate coefficients. The effects of triply-charged xenon are also assessed. The predicted thruster performance is found to have little or no dependence on the presence of triply-charged ions. The fraction of ion current carried by triply-charged ions is found to be on the order of 1% and increases slightly with increasing discharge voltage. The reaction rates for the 0?III, I?III, and II?III ionization reactions are found to be of similar order of magnitude and are about one order of magnitude smaller than the rate of 0?II ionization in the discharge channel.

  9. Satellite propulsion spectral signature detection and analysis through Hall effect thruster plume and atmospheric modeling

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Wheeler, Pamela; Cobb, Richard; Hartsfield, Carl; Prince, Benjamin

    2016-09-01

    Space Situational Awareness (SSA) is of utmost importance in today's congested and contested space environment. Satellites must perform orbital corrections for station keeping, devices like high efficiency electric propulsion systems such as a Hall effect thrusters (HETs) to accomplish this are on the rise. The health of this system is extremely important to ensure the satellite can maintain proper position and perform its intended mission. Electron temperature is a commonly used diagnostic to determine the efficiency of a hall thruster. Recent papers have coordinated near infrared (NIR) spectral measurements of emission lines in xenon and krypton to electron temperature measurements. Ground based observations of these spectral lines could allow the health of the thruster to be determined while the satellite is in operation. Another issue worth considering is the availability of SSA assets for ground-based observations. The current SSA architecture is limited and task saturated. If smaller telescopes, like those at universities, could successfully detect these signatures they could augment data collection for the SSA network. To facilitate this, precise atmospheric modeling must be used to pull out the signature. Within the atmosphere, the NIR has a higher transmission ratio and typical HET propellants are approximately 3x the intensity in the NIR versus the visible spectrum making it ideal for ground based observations. The proposed research will focus on developing a model to determine xenon and krypton signatures through the atmosphere and estimate the efficacy through ground-based observations. The model will take power modes, orbit geometries, and satellite altitudes into consideration and be correlated with lab and field observations.

  10. Chromium-induced ferromagnetism with perpendicular anisotropy in topological crystalline insulator SnTe (111) thin films

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Wang, Fei; Zhang, Hongrui; Jiang, Jue; Zhao, Yi-Fan; Yu, Jia; Liu, Wei; Li, Da; Chan, Moses H. W.; Sun, Jirong; Zhang, Zhidong; Chang, Cui-Zu

    2018-03-01

    Topological crystalline insulator is a recently discovered topological phase of matter. It possesses multiple Dirac surface states, which are protected by the crystal symmetry. This is in contrast to the time-reversal symmetry that is operative in the well-known topological insulators. In the presence of a Zeeman field and/or strain, the multiple Dirac surface states are gapped. The high-Chern-number quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) state is predicted to emerge if the chemical potential resides in all the Zeeman gaps. Here, we use molecular-beam epitaxy to grow 12 double-layer (DL) pure and Cr-doped SnTe (111) thin film on heat-treated SrTi O3 (111) substrate using a quintuple layer of insulating (Bi0.2Sb0.8 ) 2T e3 topological insulator as a buffer film. The Hall traces of Cr-doped SnTe film at low temperatures display square hysteresis loops indicating long-range ferromagnetic order with perpendicular anisotropy. The Curie temperature of the 12 DL S n0.9C r0.1Te film is ˜110 K. Due to the chemical potential crossing the bulk valence bands, the anomalous Hall resistance of 12 DL S n0.9C r0.1Te film is substantially lower than the predicted quantized value (˜1 /4 h /e2 ). It is possible that with systematic tuning the chemical potential via chemical doping and electrical gating, the high-Chern-number QAH state can be realized in the Cr-doped SnTe (111) thin film.

  11. Theoretical study of the zero-gap organic conductor α-(BEDT-TTF)2I3

    PubMed Central

    Kobayashi, Akito; Katayama, Shinya; Suzumura, Yoshikazu

    2009-01-01

    The quasi-two-dimensional molecular conductor α-(BEDT-TTF)2I3 exhibits anomalous transport phenomena where the temperature dependence of resistivity is weak but the ratio of the Hall coefficient at 10 K to that at room temperature is of the order of 104. These puzzling phenomena were solved by predicting massless Dirac fermions, whose motions are described using the tilted Weyl equation with anisotropic velocity. α-(BEDT-TTF)2I3 is a unique material among several materials with Dirac fermions, i.e. graphene, bismuth, and quantum wells such as HgTe, from the view-points of both the structure and electronic states described as follows. α-(BEDT-TTF)2I3 has the layered structure with highly two-dimensional massless Dirac fermions. The anisotropic velocity and incommensurate momenta of the contact points, ±k0, originate from the inequivalency of the BEDT-TTF sites in the unit cell, where ±k0 moves in the first Brillouin zone with increasing pressure. The massless Dirac fermions exist in the presence of the charge disproportionation and are robust against the increase in pressure. The electron densities on those inequivalent BEDT-TTF sites exhibit anomalous momentum distributions, reflecting the angular dependences of the wave functions around the contact points. Those unique electronic properties affect the spatial oscillations of the electron densities in the vicinity of an impurity. A marked behavior of the Hall coefficient, where the sign of the Hall coefficient reverses sharply but continuously at low temperatures around 5 K, is investigated by treating the interband effects of the magnetic field exactly. It is shown that such behavior is possible by assuming the existence of the extremely small amount of electron doping. The enhancement of the orbital diamagnetism is also expected. The results of the present research shed light on a new aspect of Dirac fermion physics, i.e. the emergence of unique electronic properties owing to the structure of the material. PMID:27877282

  12. Near-Surface Plasma Characterization of the 12.5-kW NASA TDU1 Hall Thruster

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Shastry, Rohit; Huang, Wensheng; Kamhawi, Hani

    2015-01-01

    To advance the state-of-the-art in Hall thruster technology, NASA is developing a 12.5-kW, high-specific-impulse, high-throughput thruster for the Solar Electric Propulsion Technology Demonstration Mission. In order to meet the demanding lifetime requirements of potential missions such as the Asteroid Redirect Robotic Mission, magnetic shielding was incorporated into the thruster design. Two units of the resulting thruster, called the Hall Effect Rocket with Magnetic Shielding (HERMeS), were fabricated and are presently being characterized. The first of these units, designated the Technology Development Unit 1 (TDU1), has undergone extensive performance and thermal characterization at NASA Glenn Research Center. A preliminary lifetime assessment was conducted by characterizing the degree of magnetic shielding within the thruster. This characterization was accomplished by placing eight flush-mounted Langmuir probes within each discharge channel wall and measuring the local plasma potential and electron temperature at various axial locations. Measured properties indicate a high degree of magnetic shielding across the throttle table, with plasma potential variations along each channel wall being less than or equal to 5 eV and electron temperatures being maintained at less than or equal to 5 eV, even at 800 V discharge voltage near the thruster exit plane. These properties indicate that ion impact energies within the HERMeS will not exceed 26 eV, which is below the expected sputtering threshold energy for boron nitride. Parametric studies that varied the facility backpressure and magnetic field strength at 300 V, 9.4 kW, illustrate that the plasma potential and electron temperature are insensitive to these parameters, with shielding being maintained at facility pressures 3X higher and magnetic field strengths 2.5X higher than nominal conditions. Overall, the preliminary lifetime assessment indicates a high degree of shielding within the HERMeS TDU1, effectively mitigating discharge channel erosion as a life-limiting mechanism.

  13. Intrinsic Dawn-Dusk Asymmetry of Magnetotail Thin Current Sheet

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Lu, S.; Pritchett, P. L.; Angelopoulos, V.; Artemyev, A.

    2017-12-01

    Magnetic reconnection and its related phenomena (flux ropes, dipolarization fronts, bursty bulk flows, particle injections, etc.) occur more frequently on the duskside in the Earth's magnetotail. Magnetohydrodynamic simulations attributed the asymmetry to the nonuniform ionospheric conductance through global scale magnetosphere-ionosphere interaction. Hybrid simulations, on the other hand, found an alternative responsible mechanism: the Hall effect in the magnetotail thin current sheet, but left an open question: What is the physical origin of the asymmetric Hall effect? The answer could be the temperature difference on the two sides and/or the dawn-dusk transportation of magnetic flux and plasmas. In this work, we use 3-D particle-in-cell simulations to further explore the magnetotail dawn-dusk asymmetry. The magnetotail equilibrium contains a dipole magnetic field and a current sheet region. The simulation is driven by a symmetric and localized (in the y direction) high-latitude electric field, under which the current sheet thins with a decrease of Bz. During the same time, a dawn-dusk asymmetry is formed intrinsically in the thin current sheet, with a smaller Bz, a stronger Hall effect (indicated by the Hall electric field Ez), and a stronger cross-tail current jy on the duskside. The deep origin of the asymmetry is also shown to be dominated by the dawnward E×B drift of magnetic flux and plasmas. A direct consequence of this intrinsic dawn-dusk asymmetry is that it favors magnetotail reconnection and related phenomena to preferentially occur on the duskside.

  14. Spin-Hall effect and emergent antiferromagnetic phase transition in n-Si

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Lou, Paul C.; Kumar, Sandeep

    2018-04-01

    Spin current experiences minimal dephasing and scattering in Si due to small spin-orbit coupling and spin-lattice interactions is the primary source of spin relaxation. We hypothesize that if the specimen dimension is of the same order as the spin diffusion length then spin polarization will lead to non-equilibrium spin accumulation and emergent phase transition. In n-Si, spin diffusion length has been reported up to 6 μm. The spin accumulation in Si will modify the thermal transport behavior of Si, which can be detected with thermal characterization. In this study, we report observation of spin-Hall effect and emergent antiferromagnetic phase transition behavior using magneto-electro-thermal transport characterization. The freestanding Pd (1 nm)/Ni80Fe20 (75 nm)/MgO (1 nm)/n-Si (2 μm) thin film specimen exhibits a magnetic field dependent thermal transport and spin-Hall magnetoresistance behavior attributed to Rashba effect. An emergent phase transition is discovered using self-heating 3ω method, which shows a diverging behavior at 270 K as a function of temperature similar to a second order phase transition. We propose that spin-Hall effect leads to the spin accumulation and resulting emergent antiferromagnetic phase transition. We propose that the length scale for Rashba effect can be equal to the spin diffusion length and two-dimensional electron gas is not essential for it. The emergent antiferromagnetic phase transition is attributed to the site inversion asymmetry in diamond cubic Si lattice.

  15. Electronic Phenomena in Two-Dimensional Topological Insulators

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Hart, Sean

    In recent years, two-dimensional electron systems have played an integral role at the forefront of discoveries in condensed matter physics. These include the integer and fractional quantum Hall effects, massless electron physics in graphene, the quantum spin and quantum anomalous Hall effects, and many more. Investigation of these fascinating states of matter brings with it surprising new results, challenges us to understand new physical phenomena, and pushes us toward new technological capabilities. In this thesis, we describe a set of experiments aimed at elucidating the behavior of two such two-dimensional systems: the quantum Hall effect, and the quantum spin Hall effect. The first experiment examines electronic behavior at the edge of a two-dimensional electron system formed in a GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure, under the application of a strong perpendicular magnetic field. When the ratio between the number of electrons and flux quanta in the system is tuned near certain integer or fractional values, the electrons in the system can form states which are respectively known as the integer and fractional quantum Hall effects. These states are insulators in the bulk, but carry gapless excitations at the edge. Remarkably, in certain fractional quantum Hall states, it was predicted that even as charge is carried downstream along an edge, heat can be carried upstream in a neutral edge channel. By placing quantum dots along a quantum Hall edge, we are able to locally monitor the edge temperature. Using a quantum point contact, we can locally heat the edge and use the quantum dot thermometers to detect heat carried both downstream and upstream. We find that heat can be carried upstream when the edge contains structure related to the nu = 2/3 fractional quantum Hall state. We further find that this fractional edge physics can even be present when the bulk is tuned to the nu = 1integer quantum Hall state. Our experiments also demonstrate that the nature of this fractional reconstruction can be tuned by modifying the sharpness of the confining potential at the edge. In the second set of experiments, we focus on an exciting new two-dimensional system known as a quantum spin Hall insulator. Realized in quantum well heterostructures formed by layers of HgTe and HgCdTe, this material belongs to a set of recently discovered topological insulators. Like the quantum Hall effect, the quantum spin Hall effect is characterized by an insulating bulk and conducting edge states. However, the quantum spin Hall effect occurs in the absence of an external magnetic field, and contains a pair of counter propagating edge states which are the time-reversed partners of one another. It was recently predicted that a Josephson junction based around one of these edge states could host a new variety of excitation called a Majorana fermion. Majorana fermions are predicted to have non-Abelian braiding statistics, a property which holds promise as a robust basis for quantum information processing. In our experiments, we place a section of quantum spin Hall insulator between two superconducting leads, to form a Josephson junction. By measuring Fraunhofer interference, we are able to study the spatial distribution of supercurrent in the junction. In the quantum spin Hall regime, this supercurrent becomes confined to the topological edge states. In addition to providing a microscopic picture of these states, our measurement scheme generally provides a way to investigate the edge structure of any topological insulator. In further experiments, we tune the chemical potential into the conduction band of the HgTe system, and investigate the behavior of Fraunhofer interference as a magnetic field is applied parallel to the plane of the quantum well. By theoretically analyzing the interference in a parallel field, we find that Cooper pairs in the material acquire a tunable momentum that grows with the magnetic field strength. This finite pairing momentum leads to the appearance of triplet pair correlations at certain locations within the junction, which we are able to control with the external magnetic field. Our measurements and analysis also provide a method to obtain information about the Fermi surface properties and spin-orbit coupling in two-dimensional materials.

  16. Electrical Characterization of Thin Film Cadmium Telluride Electrodeposited from Tri-N Telluride

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    von Windheim, Jesko A.

    The electrical transport properties of CdTe electrodeposited from tri-n-butylphosphine telluride have been studied by resistivity and Hall effect measurements. Methods have been developed to reproducibly remove large area samples from their conducting substrates, and these samples were prepared for temperature dependent Hall measurements and resistivity measurements. Apparatus was designed and built to routinely measure Hall voltages as low as 250 muV for source impedances up to 10 ^{12} Omega. The central aspect of the measurement system was a low cost, differential electrometer amplifier designed around the AD549L monolithic electrometer operational amplifier. Temperature control was achieved via a Eurotherm 808 temperature controller, and a cooled stream of nitrogen gas. With this system, temperature could be maintained within +/- 0.5^circC at set points between -40^circC and +40^circC. Data collection, temperature ramping, and power to the magnet were all computer controlled, and resistivity measurements were fully automated. As-annealed electrodeposited CdTe was found to be consistently p-type, with resistivity values typically 10^6- 10^{7 } Omega-cm. Various donor and acceptor dopants have been incorporated into polycrystalline CdTe films by three methods: electrochemical codeposition, electromigration and vapour techniques. The dopants were Cd, Te, Cu, Ag, In, and O_2. The activity of the dopant was dependent on the method that was used for incorporation. Oxygen was found to only have a significant effect when it was incorporated in situ, during deposition. For Cd and Te, on the other hand, little effect was seen when their concentration was varied in situ. However, hole concentration increased substantially when Te was incorporated by diffusion, and a p to n conversion was observed when Cd was incorporated by diffusion. The carrier concentration of p-type CdTe could be systematically increased by increasing the current density for the electromigration of copper. The decreasing carrier concentration was accompanied by a decrease in resistivity and a decrease in mobility. The effect of dopant density on the resistivity of the polycrystalline cadmium telluride films, deposited from tri-n-butylphosphine telluride, can consistently be described by a grain boundary model. In this model charging of grain boundary states results in a barrier and can affect the carrier density. According to the model, dopants accumulated at grain boundaries do not generate carriers and do not affect the density of interface states.

  17. Characterization of graded interface In(x)Ga(1-x)As/In(0.52)Al(0.48)As (x between 0.53 and 0.70) structures grown by molecular-beam epitaxy

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Peng, C. K.; Sinha, S.; Morkoc, H.

    1987-01-01

    Modulation-doped In(x)Ga(1-x)As/In(0.52)Al(0.48)As/InP structures were grown by molecular-beam epitaxy with x values between 53 and 70 percent. For pseudomorphic cases, graded instead of abrupt interfaces were used. Hall mobility and persistent photoconductivity measurements as a function of temperature were used to characterize samples with different structural parameters. Consistent trends in the variation of mobilities and two-dimensional carrier concentration, n(2D), under light and dark conditions have been observed and discussed in terms of applicable scattering mechanisms. The Hall mobilities are comparable to the best results obtained to date but with significantly higher n(2D) concentration.

  18. Anomalous thermoelectric phenomena in lattice models of multi-Weyl semimetals

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Gorbar, E. V.; Miransky, V. A.; Shovkovy, I. A.; Sukhachov, P. O.

    2017-10-01

    The thermoelectric transport coefficients are calculated in a generic lattice model of multi-Weyl semimetals with a broken time-reversal symmetry by using the Kubo's linear response theory. The contributions connected with the Berry curvature-induced electromagnetic orbital and heat magnetizations are systematically taken into account. It is shown that the thermoelectric transport is profoundly affected by the nontrivial topology of multi-Weyl semimetals. In particular, the calculation reveals a number of thermal coefficients of the topological origin which describe the anomalous Nernst and thermal Hall effects in the absence of background magnetic fields. Similarly to the anomalous Hall effect, all anomalous thermoelectric coefficients are proportional to the integer topological charge of the Weyl nodes. The dependence of the thermoelectric coefficients on the chemical potential and temperature is also studied.

  19. The influence of additives on Hall-Héroult bath properties

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Haupin, Warren

    1991-11-01

    Molten cryolite is the main ingredient of the Hall-Héroult electrolyte. Additives are used to improve its chemical and physical properties. The ideal additive should decrease the solubility of reduced species in the melt and lower the liquidus temperature for improved Faradaic efficiency. It should increase, or at least not decrease, alumina solubility; increase electrical conductivity for better power efficiency; decrease density to provide better separation between the aluminum and the molten salt, and decrease vapor pressure to minimize fluoride loss. It should neither contain nor produce an ionic species with a lower discharge potential than aluminum (for the cation) or oxygen (for the anion). There is no ideal additive; hence, compromises are made. Alumina solubility and electrical conductivity are often sacrificed for improved Faradaic efficiency.

  20. Minority carrier lifetime in mid-wavelength infrared InAs/InAsSb superlattices: Photon recycling and the role of radiative and Shockley-Read-Hall recombination mechanisms

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Höglund, L.; Ting, D. Z.; Soibel, A.

    The influence of radiative recombination on the minority carrier lifetime in mid-wavelength InAs/InAsSb superlattices was investigated. From the lifetime's dependence on temperature, photon recycling, and carrier concentration, it was demonstrated that radiative lifetime dominates for carrier concentrations >5 × 10{sup 14} cm{sup −3}, and Shockley-Read-Hall recombination starts to dominate the minority carrier lifetime for carrier concentrations <5 × 10{sup 14} cm{sup −3}. An observed increase of the minority carrier lifetime with increasing superlattice thickness was attributed to photon recycling, and good agreement between measured and theoretical values of the photon recycling factor was obtained.

  1. Chiral Majorana fermion modes in a quantum anomalous Hall insulator-superconductor structure.

    PubMed

    He, Qing Lin; Pan, Lei; Stern, Alexander L; Burks, Edward C; Che, Xiaoyu; Yin, Gen; Wang, Jing; Lian, Biao; Zhou, Quan; Choi, Eun Sang; Murata, Koichi; Kou, Xufeng; Chen, Zhijie; Nie, Tianxiao; Shao, Qiming; Fan, Yabin; Zhang, Shou-Cheng; Liu, Kai; Xia, Jing; Wang, Kang L

    2017-07-21

    Majorana fermion is a hypothetical particle that is its own antiparticle. We report transport measurements that suggest the existence of one-dimensional chiral Majorana fermion modes in the hybrid system of a quantum anomalous Hall insulator thin film coupled with a superconductor. As the external magnetic field is swept, half-integer quantized conductance plateaus are observed at the locations of magnetization reversals, giving a distinct signature of the Majorana fermion modes. This transport signature is reproducible over many magnetic field sweeps and appears at different temperatures. This finding may open up an avenue to control Majorana fermions for implementing robust topological quantum computing. Copyright © 2017 The Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancement of Science. No claim to original U.S. Government Works.

  2. B And V Photometry Of A Inverted-spectrum And Flat-spectrum Radio Sources With The Rowan 0.4-meter Telescope

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Guerra, Erick; Pultar, R.

    2010-05-01

    Several galaxies have been selected for an exploratory campaign with 0.4-meter telescope atop Science Hall at Rowan University. These galaxies exhibit inverted radio spectra on the basis of fluxes in the GB6 and VLA FIRST catalogs and have SDSS magnitudes in g-band less than 15.5. The results of V and R band photometry of theses galaxies are presented. Photometry from multiple nights will be examined to explore variability on the timescales of days or weeks. Targets in the sample include Markarian 668 and NGC 5635. These are the first results from an ongoing campaign to expand the function of the observatory atop Science Hall. The authors would like to acknowledge Ric and Jean Edelman for their gift that funded the 0.4-meter telescope.

  3. Temperature dependence of spin-orbit torques in Cu-Au alloys

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Wen, Yan; Wu, Jun; Li, Peng; Zhang, Qiang; Zhao, Yuelei; Manchon, Aurelien; Xiao, John Q.; Zhang, Xixiang

    2017-03-01

    We investigated current driven spin-orbit torques in C u40A u60/N i80F e20/Ti layered structures with in-plane magnetization. We have demonstrated a reliable and convenient method to separate dampinglike torque and fieldlike torque by using the second harmonic technique. It is found that the dampinglike torque and fieldlike torque depend on temperature very differently. Dampinglike torque increases with temperature, while fieldlike torque decreases with temperature, which are different from results obtained previously in other material systems. We observed a nearly linear dependence between the spin Hall angle and longitudinal resistivity, suggesting that skew scattering may be the dominant mechanism of spin-orbit torques.

  4. Finite element study of three dimensional radiative nano-plasma flow subject to Hall and ion slip currents

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Nawaz, M.; Zubair, T.

    In this article, we developed a computer code of Galerikan Finite Element method (GFEM) for three dimensional flow equations of nano-plasma fluid (blood) in the presence of uniform applied magnetic field when Hall and ion slip current are significant. Lorentz force is calculated through generalized Ohm's law with Maxwell equations. A series of numerical simulations are carried out to search ηmax and algebraic equations are solved by Gauss-Seidel method with simulation tolerance 10-8 . Simulated results for special case have an excellent agreement with the already published results. Velocity components and temperature of the nano-plasma (blood) are influenced significantly by the inclusion of nano-particles of Copper (Cu) and Silver (Ag). Heat enhancement is observed when copper and silver nonmagnetic nanoparticles are used instead of simple base fluid (conventional fluid). Radiative nature of nano-plasma in the presence of magnetic field causes a decrease in the temperature due to the transfer of heat by the electromagnetic waves. In contrast to this, due to heat dissipated by Joule heating and viscous dissipation phenomena, temperature of nano-plasmaincreases as thermal radiation parameter is increased. Thermal boundary layer thickness can be controlled by using radiative fluid instead of non-radiative fluid. Momentum boundary layer thickness can be reduced by increasing the intensity of the applied magnetic field. Temperature of plasma in the presence magnetic field is higher than the plasma in the absence of magnetic field.

  5. Role of ionization and electron drift velocity profile to Rayleigh instability in a Hall thruster plasma

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Singh, Sukhmander; Malik, Hitendra K.

    Role of ionization to Rayleigh instability is clarified in a Hall thruster plasma under the variety of profiles of electron drift velocity, namely, step-like profile (SLP) and two different super-Gaussian profiles (SGP1 and SGP2). For this, a relevant Rayleigh equation is derived and solved numerically using fourth-order Runge-Kutta method. Interestingly, an upper cutoff frequency of oscillations {omega}{sub max} is realized for the occurrence of the instability that shows dependence on the ionization rate {alpha}, electron drift velocity u{sub 0}, electron cyclotron frequency {Omega}, azimuthal wave number k{sub y}, plasma density n{sub 0}, density gradient {partial_derivative}n{sub 0}/{partial_derivative}x, ion (electron) thermal speedmore » V{sub thI}(V{sub thE}), and ion (electron) plasma frequency {omega}{sub pi}({omega}{sub pe}). The frequency {omega}{sub max} follows the trend {omega}{sub max} (for SGP2) >{omega}{sub max} (for SLP) >{omega}{sub max} (for SGP1) and shows a similar behaviour with ionization for all types of the velocity profiles. The instability is found to grow faster for the higher {alpha} and the ion temperature but it acquires lower rate under the effect of the higher electron temperature; the perturbed potential also varies in accordance with the growth rate. The electron temperature influences the growth rate and cutoff frequency less significantly in comparison with the ion temperature.« less

  6. Plasma Potential and Langmuir Probe Measurements in the Near-field Plume of the NASA-457Mv2 Hall Thruster

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Shastry, Rohit; Huang, Wensheng; Herman, Daniel A.; Soulas, George C.; Kamhawi, Hani

    2012-01-01

    In order to further the design of future high-power Hall thrusters and provide experimental validation for ongoing modeling efforts, plasma potential and Langmuir probe measurements were performed on the 50-kW NASA-457Mv2. An electrostatic probe array comprised of a near-field Faraday probe, single Langmuir probe, and emissive probe was used to interrogate the near-field plume from approximately 0.1 - 2.0 mean thruster diameters downstream of the thruster exit plane at the following operating conditions: 300 V, 400 V and 500 V at 30 kW and 500 V at 50 kW. Results have shown that the acceleration zone is limited to within 0.4 mean thruster diameters of the exit plane while the high-temperature region is limited to 0.25 mean thruster diameters from the exit plane at all four operating conditions. Maximum plasma potentials in the near-field at 300 and 400 V were approximately 50 V with respect to cathode potential, while maximum electron temperatures varied from 24 - 32 eV, depending on operating condition. Isothermal lines at all operating conditions were found to strongly resemble the magnetic field topology in the high-temperature regions. This distribution was found to create regions of high temperature and low density near the magnetic poles, indicating strong, thick sheath formation along these surfaces. The data taken from this study are considered valuable for future design as well as modeling validation.

  7. ac-driven vortices and the Hall effect in a superconductor with a tilted washboard pinning potential

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Shklovskij, Valerij A.; Dobrovolskiy, Oleksandr V.

    2008-09-01

    The Langevin equation for a two-dimensional (2D) nonlinear guided vortex motion in a tilted cosine pinning potential in the presence of an ac is exactly solved in terms of a matrix continued fraction at arbitrary value of the Hall effect. The influence of an ac of arbitrary amplitude and frequency on the dc and ac magnetoresistivity tensors is analyzed. The ac density and frequency dependence of the overall shape and the number and position of the Shapiro steps on the anisotropic current-voltage characteristics are considered. The influence of a subcritical or overcritical dc on the time-dependent stationary ac longitudinal and transverse resistive vortex responses (on the frequency of an ac drive Ω ) in terms of the nonlinear impedance tensor Ẑ and the nonlinear ac response at Ω harmonics are studied. Analytical formulas for 2D temperature-dependent linear impedance tensor ẐL in the presence of a dc which depend on the angle α between the current-density vector and the guiding direction of the washboard planar pinning potential are derived and analyzed. Influence of α anisotropy and the Hall effect on the nonlinear power absorption by vortices is discussed.

  8. Influence Of Secondary Electrons Produced From Plasma Material Interaction In Presence Of Crossed Electric And Magnetic Fields

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Sawlani, Kapil; Herzog, Joshua M.; Kwak, Joowon; Foster, John

    2012-10-01

    The electron energy distribution function (EEDF) plays a very important role in determining thruster efficiency as it determines various gas phase reaction rates. In Hall thrusters, secondary electron emission derived from the interaction of energetic electrons with ceramic channel surfaces influence the overall shape of the EEDF as well as determine the potential difference between the plasma and wall. The role of secondary electrons on the discharge operation of Hall thrusters is poorly understood. Experimentally, determining this effect is even more taxing as the secondary electron yield (SEY) varies drastically based on many parameters such as incident electron energies, flux and impact angle, and also on the surface properties such as temperature and roughness. The electron transport is also affected by the profile of the magnetic field, which is not uniform across the length of the accelerating channel. The goal of this work is to map out the variation of the EEDF and potential profile in response to the controlled introduction of secondary electrons. This data is expected to serve as a tool to validate and improve existing numerical models by providing boundary conditions and SEY for various situations that are encountered in Hall thrusters.

  9. Magnetotransport in two dimensional electron systems under microwave excitation and in highly oriented pyrolytic graphite

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ramanayaka, Aruna N.

    This thesis consists of two parts. The first part considers the effect of microwave radiation on magnetotransport in high quality GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure two dimensional electron systems. The effect of microwave (MW) radiation on electron temperature was studied by investigating the amplitude of the Shubnikov de Haas (SdH) oscillations in a regime where the cyclotron frequency o c and the MW angular frequency o satisfy 2o ≤ o c ≤ 3.5o. The results indicate negligible electron heating under modest MW photoexcitation, in agreement with theoretical predictions. Next, the effect of the polarization direction of the linearly polarized MWs on the MW induced magnetoresistance oscillation amplitude was investigated. The results demonstrate the first indications of polarization dependence of MW induced magnetoresistance oscillations. In the second part, experiments on the magnetotransport of three dimensional highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) reveal a non-zero Berry phase for HOPG. Furthermore, a novel phase relation between oscillatory magneto- and Hall- resistances was discovered from the studies of the HOPG specimen. INDEX WORDS: Two dimensional electron systems, Magnetoresistance, Microwave induced magnetoresistance oscillations, Graphite, Quantum Hall effect, Hall effect, Resistivity rule, Shubnikov de Haas effect, Shubnikov de Haas oscillation.

  10. Hall-effect measurements of metalorganic vapor-phase epitaxy-grown p-type homoepitaxial GaN layers with various Mg concentrations

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Horita, Masahiro; Takashima, Shinya; Tanaka, Ryo; Matsuyama, Hideaki; Ueno, Katsunori; Edo, Masaharu; Takahashi, Tokio; Shimizu, Mitsuaki; Suda, Jun

    2017-03-01

    Mg-doped p-type gallium nitride (GaN) layers with doping concentrations in the range from 6.5 × 1016 cm-3 (lightly doped) to 3.8 × 1019 cm-3 (heavily doped) were investigated by Hall-effect measurement for the analysis of hole concentration and mobility. p-GaN was homoepitaxially grown on a GaN free-standing substrate by metalorganic vapor-phase epitaxy. The threading dislocation density of p-GaN was 4 × 106 cm-2 measured by cathodoluminescence mapping. Hall-effect measurements of p-GaN were carried out at a temperature in the range from 130 to 450 K. For the lightly doped p-GaN, the acceptor concentration of 7.0 × 1016 cm-3 and the donor concentration of 3.2 × 1016 cm-3 were obtained, where the compensation ratio was 46%. We also obtained the depth of the Mg acceptor level to be 220 meV. The hole mobilities of 86, 31, 14 cm2 V-1 s-1 at 200, 300, 400 K, respectively, were observed in the lightly doped p-GaN.

  11. Dephasing in a 5/2 quantum Hall Mach-Zehnder interferometer due to the presence of neutral edge modes

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Dinaii, Yehuda; Goldstein, Moshe; Gefen, Yuval

    Non-Abelian statistics is an intriguing feature predicted to characterize quasiparticles in certain topological phases of matter. This property is both fascinating on the theoretical side and the key ingredient for the implementation of future topological quantum computers. A smoking gun manifestation of non-Abelian statistics consists of demonstrating that braiding of quasiparticles leads to transitions among different states in the relevant degenerate Hilbert manifold. This can be achieved utilizing a Mach-Zehnder interferometer, where Coulomb effects can be neglected, and the electric current is expected to carry clear signatures of non-Abelianity. Here we argue that attempts to measure non-Abelian statistics in the prominent quantum Hall fraction of 5/2 may fail; this can be understood by studying the corresponding edge theory at finite temperatures and bias. We find that the presence of neutral modes imposes stronger limitations on the experimental conditions as compared to quantum Hall states that do not support neutral edge modes. We discuss how to overcome this hindrance. Interestingly, neutral-mode-induced dephasing can be quite different in the Pfaffian state as compared to the anti-Pfaffian state, if the neutral and charge velocities are comparable.

  12. Quantum Hall resistance standard in graphene devices under relaxed experimental conditions

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Schopfer, F.; Ribeiro-Palau, R.; Lafont, F.; Brun-Picard, J.; Kazazis, D.; Michon, A.; Cheynis, F.; Couturaud, O.; Consejo, C.; Jouault, B.; Poirier, W.

    Large-area and high-quality graphene devices synthesized by CVD on SiC are used to develop reliable electrical resistance standards, based on the quantum Hall effect (QHE), with state-of-the-art accuracy of 1x10-9 and under an extended range of experimental conditions of magnetic field (down to 3.5 T), temperature (up to 10 K) or current (up to 0.5 mA). These conditions are much relaxed as compared to what is required by GaAs/AlGaAs standards and will enable to broaden the use of the primary quantum electrical standards to the benefit of Science and Industry for electrical measurements. Furthermore, by comparison of these graphene devices with GaAs/AlGaAs standards, we demonstrate the universality of the QHE within an ultimate uncertainty of 8.2x10-11. This suggests the exact relation of the quantized Hall resistance with the Planck constant and the electron charge, which is crucial for the new SI to be based on fixing such fundamental constants. These results show that graphene realizes its promises and demonstrates its superiority over other materials for a demanding application. Nature Nanotech. 10, 965-971, 2015, Nature Commun. 6, 6806, 2015

  13. Spin-Hall Switching of In-plane Exchange Biased Heterostructures

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Mann, Maxwell; Beach, Geoffrey

    The spin Hall effect (SHE) in heavy-metal/ferromagnet bilayers generates a pure transverse spin current from in-plane charge current, allowing for efficient switching of spintronic devices with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy. Here, we demonstrate that an AFM deposited adjacent to the FM establishes a large in-plane exchange bias field, allowing operation at zero HIP. We sputtered Pt(3nm)/Co(0.9nm)/Ni80Co20O(tAF) stacks at room-temperature in an in-plane magnetic field of 3 kOe. The current-induced effective field was estimated in Hall cross devices by measuring the variation of the out-of-plane switching field as a function of JIP and HIP. The spin torque efficiency, dHSL/dJIP, is measured versus HIP for a sample with tAF =30 nm, and for a control in which NiCoO is replaced by TaOx. In the latter, dHSL/dJIP varied linearly with HIP. In the former, dHSL/dJIP varied nonlinearly with HIP and exhibited an offset indicating nonzero spin torque efficiency with zero HIP. The magnitude of HEB was 600 Oe in-plane.

  14. An Analysis of Multiple Configurations of Next-Generation Cathodes in a Low Power Hall Thruster

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-03-01

    compressor, the roughing pump , and the cryo-head temperature indicators. Figure 6. SPASS lab vacuum chamber and associated components. To measure...in progress to add additional cryo- pumps to the existing vacuum chamber that may allow higher propellant flow rates without exceeding ~1x10-5 torr... Vacuum Facility .........................................................................................................45 Test Assembly

  15. Surfactant-Induced Osazone Formation at Room Temperature

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Nagajyothi, K.; Raghavan, P. S.; Gopalan, R.

    2001-06-01

    Literature Cited

    1. Attwood, D.; Florence, A. T. Surfactant Systems: Their Chemistry, Pharmacy, and Biology; Chapman and Hall: London, 1983.
    2. Fendler, J. H.; Fendler, E. H. Catalysis in Micellar and Macromolecular Systems; Academic: New York, 1977.
    3. Ponraj, D. S.; Venkataraman, R.; Raghavan, P. S. J. Chem. Educ. 1990, 67, 621.

  16. Co-Flow Hollow Cathode Technology

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Hofer, Richard R.; Goebel, Dan M.

    2011-01-01

    Hall thrusters utilize identical hollow cathode technology as ion thrusters, yet must operate at much higher mass flow rates in order to efficiently couple to the bulk plasma discharge. Higher flow rates are necessary in order to provide enough neutral collisions to transport electrons across magnetic fields so that they can reach the discharge. This higher flow rate, however, has potential life-limiting implications for the operation of the cathode. A solution to the problem involves splitting the mass flow into the hollow cathode into two streams, the internal and external flows. The internal flow is fixed and set such that the neutral pressure in the cathode allows for a high utilization of the emitter surface area. The external flow is variable depending on the flow rate through the anode of the Hall thruster, but also has a minimum in order to suppress high-energy ion generation. In the co-flow hollow cathode, the cathode assembly is mounted on thruster centerline, inside the inner magnetic core of the thruster. An annular gas plenum is placed at the base of the cathode and propellant is fed throughout to produce an azimuthally symmetric flow of gas that evenly expands around the cathode keeper. This configuration maximizes propellant utilization and is not subject to erosion processes. External gas feeds have been considered in the past for ion thruster applications, but usually in the context of eliminating high energy ion production. This approach is adapted specifically for the Hall thruster and exploits the geometry of a Hall thruster to feed and focus the external flow without introducing significant new complexity to the thruster design.

  17. Numerical simulation of buoyancy peristaltic flow of Johnson-Segalman nanofluid in an inclined channel

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Hayat, T.; Ayub, Sadia; Alsaedi, Ahmed; Ahmad, Bashir

    2018-06-01

    This study addresses mixed convection on peristaltic flow in an inclined channel. The relevant flow problem is developed for MHD Johnson-Segalman nanofluid. Hall current and thermal radiation are discussed. Channel boundaries are compliant in nature. Slip effects for velocity, temperature and concentration are examined. Long wavelength concept is employed. Variations for prominent parameters in velocity, temperature, concentration, heat transfer coefficient and streamlines are obtained via built-in numerical approach. Velocity shows significant decline for larger local temperature Grashof number. Heat transfer slows down for increasing thermophoresis and thermal slip parameters. Increase in bolus is reported for higher Weissenberg number.

  18. Room-Temperature Spin-Orbit Torque Switching Induced by a Topological Insulator

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Han, Jiahao; Richardella, A.; Siddiqui, Saima A.; Finley, Joseph; Samarth, N.; Liu, Luqiao

    2017-08-01

    The strongly spin-momentum coupled electronic states in topological insulators (TI) have been extensively pursued to realize efficient magnetic switching. However, previous studies show a large discrepancy of the charge-spin conversion efficiency. Moreover, current-induced magnetic switching with TI can only be observed at cryogenic temperatures. We report spin-orbit torque switching in a TI-ferrimagnet heterostructure with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy at room temperature. The obtained effective spin Hall angle of TI is substantially larger than the previously studied heavy metals. Our results demonstrate robust charge-spin conversion in TI and provide a direct avenue towards applicable TI-based spintronic devices.

  19. Quasiparticle Excitations with Berry Curvature in Insulating Magnets and Weyl Semimetals

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Hirschberger, Maximilian Anton

    The concept of the geometric Berry phase of the quantum mechanical wave function has led to a better theoretical understanding of natural phenomena in all fields of fundamental physics research. In condensed matter physics, the impact of this theoretical discovery has been particularly profound: The quantum Hall effect, the anomalous Hall effect, the quantum spin Hall effect, magnetic skyrmions, topological insulators, and topological semimetals are but a few subfields that have witnessed rapid developments over the three decades since Michael Berry's landmark paper. In this thesis, I will present and discuss the results of three experiments where Berry's phase leads to qualitatively new transport behavior of electrons or magnetic spin excitations in solids. We introduce the theoretical framework that leads to the prediction of a thermal Hall effect of magnons in Cu(1,3-bdc), a simple two-dimensional layered ferromagnet on a Kagome net of spin S = 1/2 copper atoms. Combining our experimental results measured down to very low temperatures T = 0.3 K with published data from inelastic neutron scattering, we report a quantitative comparison with the theory. This confirms the expected net Berry curvature of the magnon band dispersion in this material. Secondly, we have studied the thermal Hall effect in the frustrated pyrochlore magnet Tb2Ti2O7, where the thermal Hall effect is large in the absence of long-range magnetic order. We establish the magnetic nature of the thermal Hall effect in Tb2Ti2O7, introducing this material as the first example of a paramagnet with non-trivial low-lying spin excitations. Comparing our results to other materials with zero thermal Hall effect such as the classical spin ice Dy2Ti 2O7 and the non-magnetic analogue Y2Ti2O 7, we carefully discuss the experimental limitations of our setup and rule out spurious background signals. The third and final chapter of this thesis is dedicated to electrical transport and thermopower experiments on the half-Heusler material GdPtBi. A careful doping study of the negative longitudinal magnetoresistance (LMR) establishes GdPtBi as a new material platform to study the physical properties of a simple Weyl metal with only two Weyl points (for magnetic field along the crystallographic 〈111〉 direction). The negative LMR is associated with the theory of the chiral anomaly in solids, and a direct consequence of the nonzero Berry curvature of the energy band structure of a Weyl semimetal. We compare our results to detailed calculations of the electronic band structure. Moving beyond the negative LMR, we report for the first time the effect of the chiral anomaly on the longitudinal thermopower in a Weyl semimetal.

  20. Charge carrier coherence and Hall effect in organic semiconductors.

    PubMed

    Yi, H T; Gartstein, Y N; Podzorov, V

    2016-03-30

    Hall effect measurements are important for elucidating the fundamental charge transport mechanisms and intrinsic mobility in organic semiconductors. However, Hall effect studies frequently reveal an unconventional behavior that cannot be readily explained with the simple band-semiconductor Hall effect model. Here, we develop an analytical model of Hall effect in organic field-effect transistors in a regime of coexisting band and hopping carriers. The model, which is supported by the experiments, is based on a partial Hall voltage compensation effect, occurring because hopping carriers respond to the transverse Hall electric field and drift in the direction opposite to the Lorentz force acting on band carriers. We show that this can lead in particular to an underdeveloped Hall effect observed in organic semiconductors with substantial off-diagonal thermal disorder. Our model captures the main features of Hall effect in a variety of organic semiconductors and provides an analytical description of Hall mobility, carrier density and carrier coherence factor.

  1. 5. View of Community Hall, first floor interior, entrance hall ...

    Library of Congress Historic Buildings Survey, Historic Engineering Record, Historic Landscapes Survey

    5. View of Community Hall, first floor interior, entrance hall on east side of building, facing southeast. Ticket booth center foreground, stairway to auditorium right foreground. - Community Hall, Rainier Avenue & View Drive, Port Gamble, Kitsap County, WA

  2. Radiation damage annealing mechanisms and possible low temperature annealing in silicon solar cells

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Weinberg, I.; Swartz, C. K.

    1980-01-01

    Deep level transient spectroscopy and the Shockley-Read-Hall recombination theory are used to identify the defect responsible for reverse annealing in 2 ohm-cm n+/p silicon solar cells. This defect, with energy level at Ev + 0.30 eV, has been tentatively identified as a boron-oxygen-vacancy complex. It has been also determined by calculation that the removal of this defect could result in significant annealing at temperatures as low as 200 C for 2 ohm-cm and lower resistivity cells.

  3. High resolution study of magnetic ordering at absolute zero.

    PubMed

    Lee, M; Husmann, A; Rosenbaum, T F; Aeppli, G

    2004-05-07

    High resolution pressure measurements in the zero-temperature limit provide a unique opportunity to study the behavior of strongly interacting, itinerant electrons with coupled spin and charge degrees of freedom. Approaching the precision that has become the hallmark of experiments on classical critical phenomena, we characterize the quantum critical behavior of the model, elemental antiferromagnet chromium, lightly doped with vanadium. We resolve the sharp doubling of the Hall coefficient at the quantum critical point and trace the dominating effects of quantum fluctuations up to surprisingly high temperatures.

  4. ENCOURAGING ELECTRICITY SAVINGS IN A UNIVERSITY RESIDENTIAL HALL THROUGH A COMBINATION OF FEEDBACK, VISUAL PROMPTS, AND INCENTIVES

    PubMed Central

    Bekker, Marthinus J; Cumming, Tania D; Osborne, Nikola K.P; Bruining, Angela M; McClean, Julia I; Leland, Louis S

    2010-01-01

    This experiment investigated the combined use of visual prompts, daily feedback, and rewards to reduce electricity consumption in a university residential hall. After a 17-day baseline period, the experimental intervention was introduced in the intervention hall, and no change was made in the control hall. Energy usage decreased in the intervention hall, but energy usage did not change appreciably in the control hall. In the intervention hall, mean daytime and nighttime savings were 16.2% and 10.7%, respectively, compared to savings of 3.8% (day) and 6.5% (night) in the control hall. PMID:21119909

  5. Thrust performance, propellant ionization, and thruster erosion of an external discharge plasma thruster

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Karadag, Burak; Cho, Shinatora; Funaki, Ikkoh

    2018-04-01

    It is quite a challenge to design low power Hall thrusters with a long lifetime and high efficiency because of the large surface area to volume ratio and physical limits to the magnetic circuit miniaturization. As a potential solution to this problem, we experimentally investigated the external discharge plasma thruster (XPT). The XPT produces and sustains a plasma discharge completely in the open space outside of the thruster structure through a magnetic mirror configuration. It eliminates the very fundamental component of Hall thrusters, discharge channel side walls, and its magnetic circuit consists solely of a pair of hollow cylindrical permanent magnets. Thrust, low frequency discharge current oscillation, ion beam current, and plasma property measurements were conducted to characterize the manufactured prototype thruster for the proof of concept. The thrust performance, propellant ionization, and thruster erosion were discussed. Thrust generated by the XPT was on par with conventional Hall thrusters [stationary plasma thruster (SPT) or thruster with anode layer] at the same power level (˜11 mN at 250 W with 25% anode efficiency without any optimization), and discharge current had SPT-level stability (Δ < 0.2). Faraday probe measurements revealed that ion beams are finely collimated, and plumes have Gaussian distributions. Mass utilization efficiencies, beam utilization efficiencies, and plume divergence efficiencies ranged from 28 to 62%, 78 to 99%, and 40 to 48%, respectively. Electron densities and electron temperatures were found to reach 4 × 1018 m-3 ( ∂ n e / n e = ±52%) and 15 eV ( ∂ T e / T e = ±10%-30%), respectively, at 10 mm axial distance from the anode centerline. An ionization mean free path analysis revealed that electron density in the ionization region is substantially higher than the conventional Hall thrusters, which explain why the XPT is as efficient as conventional ones even without a physical ionization chamber. Our findings propose an alternative approach for low power Hall thruster design and provide a successful proof of concept experiment of the XPT.

  6. Experimental transport studies of yttrium barium copper oxide and lambda-DNA

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Zhang, Yuexing

    This dissertation consists of two parts. In Part I, we focus on the quasi-particle transport properties in the high temperature superconductor YBa2Cu3O7-delta (YBCO), probed by the thermal Hall conductivity (kappa xy). The thermal Hall conductivity selectively reflects the transport behaviors of the charge carriers. By measuring kappaxy in the normal state YBCO, we established a new method to determine the Wiedemann-Franz (WF) ratio in cuprates. We determined the Hall-channel WF ratio kappa xy/sigmaxyT in Cu and YBCO. In the latter, we uncovered a T-linear dependence and suppression of the Hallchannel WF ratio. The suppression of the Hall-channel WF ratio in systems with predominant electron-electron scattering will be discussed. Thermal transport behaviors of the quasi-particles in the mixed state were studied by measuring kappaxx and kappa xy in a high-purity YBCO crystal. From the field-dependence of the thermal conductivity kappaxx, we separated the quasi particle contribution (kappae) from the phonon background. In the Hall channel, we observed that the (weak-field) kappa xy increased 103-fold between T c (90 K) and 30 K, implying a 100-fold enhancement of the quasi-particle lifetime. We found that kappaxy exhibited a specific scaling behavior below ˜30 K. The implication of the scaling behavior will be discussed. In Part II, we describe an experiment on determining the electrical conductivity of the bacteriophage lambda-DNA, an issue currently under intense debate. We covalently bonded the DNA to Au electrodes by incorporating thiol modified dTTP into the 'sticky' ends of the lambda-DNA. Two-probe measurements on such molecules provided a lower bound for the resistivity rho > 10 6 mum at bias potentials up to 20 V, in conflict with recent claims of moderate to high conductivity. We stress the importance of eliminating salt residues in these measurements.

  7. Direct detection of spin Nernst effect in platinum

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Bose, A.; Bhuktare, S.; Singh, H.; Dutta, S.; Achanta, V. G.; Tulapurkar, A. A.

    2018-04-01

    Generation of spin current lies at the heart of spintronic research. The spin Hall effect and the spin Seebeck effect have drawn considerable attention in the last few years to create pure spin current by heavy metals and ferromagnets, respectively. In this work, we show the direct evidence of heat current to spin current conversion in non-magnetic Platinum by the spin Nernst effect (SNE) at room temperature. This is the thermal analogue of the spin Hall effect in non-magnets. We have shown that the 8 K/μm thermal gradient in Pt can lead to the generation of pure spin current density of the order of 108 A/m2 by virtue of SNE. This opens up an additional possibility to couple the relativistic spin-orbit interaction with the thermal gradient for spintronic applications.

  8. Point defect-induced magnetic properties in CuAlO2 films without magnetic impurities

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Luo, Jie; Lin, Yow-Jon

    2016-03-01

    The magnetic properties of the undoped CuAlO2 thin films with different compositions are examined. In order to understand this phenomenon and to determine the correlation between the magnetic and electrical properties and point defects, the X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and Hall effect measurements are performed. Combining with Hall effect, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and alternating gradient magnetometer measurements, a direct link between the hole concentration, magnetism, copper vacancy (VCu), oxygen vacancy, and interstitial oxygen (Oi) is established. It is shown that an increase in the number of acceptors (VCu and Oi) leads to an increase in the hole concentration. Based on theoretical and experimental investigations, the authors confirmed that both acceptors (VCu and Oi) in CuAlO2 could induce the ferromagnetic behavior at room temperature.

  9. Quantum spin Hall insulator in halogenated arsenene films with sizable energy gaps

    PubMed Central

    Wang, Dongchao; Chen, Li; Shi, Changmin; Wang, Xiaoli; Cui, Guangliang; Zhang, Pinhua; Chen, Yeqing

    2016-01-01

    Based on first-principles calculations, the electronic and topological properties of halogenated (F-, Cl-, Br- and I-) arsenene are investigated in detail. It is found that the halogenated arsenene sheets show Dirac type characteristic in the absence of spin-orbital coupling (SOC), whereas energy gap will be induced by SOC with the values ranging from 0.194 eV for F-arsenene to 0.255 eV for I-arsenene. Noticeably, these four newly proposed two-dimensional (2D) systems are verified to be quantum spin Hall (QSH) insulators by calculating the edge states with obvious linear cross inside bulk energy gap. It should be pointed out that the large energy gap in these 2D materials consisted of commonly used element is quite promising for practical applications of QSH insulators at room temperature. PMID:27340091

  10. Enhanced thermo-spin effects in iron-oxide/metal multilayers

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ramos, R.; Lucas, I.; Algarabel, P. A.; Morellón, L.; Uchida, K.; Saitoh, E.; Ibarra, M. R.

    2018-06-01

    Since the discovery of the spin Seebeck effect (SSE), much attention has been devoted to the study of the interaction between heat, spin, and charge in magnetic systems. The SSE refers to the generation of a spin current upon the application of a thermal gradient and detected by means of the inverse spin Hall effect. Conversely, the spin Peltier effect (SPE) refers to the generation of a heat current as a result of a spin current induced by the spin Hall effect. Here we report a strong enhancement of both the SSE and SPE in Fe3O4/Pt multilayered thin films at room temperature as a result of an increased thermo-spin conversion efficiency in the multilayers. These results open the possibility to design thin film heterostructures that may boost the application of thermal spin currents in spintronics.

  11. Properties of added variable plots in Cox's regression model.

    PubMed

    Lindkvist, M

    2000-03-01

    The added variable plot is useful for examining the effect of a covariate in regression models. The plot provides information regarding the inclusion of a covariate, and is useful in identifying influential observations on the parameter estimates. Hall et al. (1996) proposed a plot for Cox's proportional hazards model derived by regarding the Cox model as a generalized linear model. This paper proves and discusses properties of this plot. These properties make the plot a valuable tool in model evaluation. Quantities considered include parameter estimates, residuals, leverage, case influence measures and correspondence to previously proposed residuals and diagnostics.

  12. Robust tunability of magnetoresistance in half-Heusler R PtBi ( R = Gd , Dy, Tm, and Lu) compounds

    DOE PAGES

    Mun, Eundeok; Bud'ko, Sergey L.; Canfield, Paul C.

    2016-03-15

    We present the magnetic field dependencies of transport properties for RPtBi ( R = Gd, Dy, Tm, and Lu) half-Heusler compounds. Temperature- and field-dependent resistivity measurements of high-quality RPtBi single crystals reveal an unusually large, nonsaturating magnetoresistance (MR) up to 300 K under a moderate magnetic field of H = 140 kOe. At 300 K, the large MR effect decreases as the rare earth is traversed from Gd to Lu and the magnetic field dependence of MR shows a deviation from the conventional H2 behavior. The Hall coefficient ( RH) for R = Gd indicates a sign change around 120more » K, whereas RH curves for R = Dy, Tm, and Lu remain positive for all measured temperatures. At 300 K, the Hall resistivity reveals a deviation from the linear field dependence for all compounds. Thermoelectric power measurements on this family show strong temperature and magnetic field dependencies which are consistent with resistivity measurements. A highly enhanced thermoelectric power under applied magnetic field is observed as high as ~100 μV/K at 140 kOe. Furthermore, analysis of the transport data in this series reveals that the rare-earth-based half-Heusler compounds provide opportunities to tune MR effect through lanthanide contraction and to elucidate the mechanism of nontrivial MR.« less

  13. Electrical properties of n-type GaSb substrates and p-type GaSb buffer layers for InAs/InGaSb superlattice infrared detectors

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Mitchel, W. C., E-mail: William.Mitchel.1@us.af.mil; Haugan, H. J.; Mou, Shin

    2015-09-15

    Lightly doped n-type GaSb substrates with p-type GaSb buffer layers are the preferred templates for growth of InAs/InGaSb superlattices used in infrared detector applications because of relatively high infrared transmission and a close lattice match to the superlattices. We report here temperature dependent resistivity and Hall effect measurements of bare substrates and substrate-p-type buffer layer structures grown by molecular beam epitaxy. Multicarrier analysis of the resistivity and Hall coefficient data demonstrate that high temperature transport in the substrates is due to conduction in both the high mobility zone center Γ band and the low mobility off-center L band. High overallmore » mobility values indicate the absence of close compensation and that improved infrared and transport properties were achieved by a reduction in intrinsic acceptor concentration. Standard transport measurements of the undoped buffer layers show p-type conduction up to 300 K indicating electrical isolation of the buffer layer from the lightly n-type GaSb substrate. However, the highest temperature data indicate the early stages of the expected p to n type conversion which leads to apparent anomalously high carrier concentrations and lower than expected mobilities. Data at 77 K indicate very high quality buffer layers.« less

  14. In-plane current-driven spin-orbit torque switching in perpendicularly magnetized films with enhanced thermal tolerance

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Wu, Di; Department of Optical Science and Engineering, Key Laboratory of Micro and Nano Photonic Structures; Yu, Guoqiang, E-mail: guoqiangyu@ucla.edu

    2016-05-23

    We study spin-orbit-torque (SOT)-driven magnetization switching in perpendicularly magnetized Ta/Mo/Co{sub 40}Fe{sub 40}B{sub 20} (CoFeB)/MgO films. The thermal tolerance of the perpendicular magnetic anisotropy (PMA) is enhanced, and the films sustain the PMA at annealing temperatures of up to 430 °C, due to the ultra-thin Mo layer inserted between the Ta and CoFeB layers. More importantly, the Mo insertion layer also allows for the transmission of the spin current generated in the Ta layer due to spin Hall effect, which generates a damping-like SOT and is able to switch the perpendicular magnetization. When the Ta layer is replaced by a Pt layer,more » i.e., in a Pt/Mo/CoFeB/MgO multilayer, the direction of the SOT-induced damping-like effective field becomes opposite because of the opposite sign of spin Hall angle in Pt, which indicates that the SOT-driven switching is dominated by the spin current generated in the Ta or Pt layer rather than the Mo layer. Quantitative characterization through harmonic measurements reveals that the large SOT effective field is preserved for high annealing temperatures. This work provides a route to applying SOT in devices requiring high temperature processing steps during the back-end-of-line processes.« less

  15. Spin-polarized ground state and exact quantization at ν=5/2

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Pan, Wei

    2002-03-01

    The nature of the even-denominator fractional quantum Hall effect at ν=5/2 remains elusive, in particular, its ground state spin-polarization. An earlier, so-called "hollow core" model arrived at a spin-unpolarized wave function. The more recent calculations based on a model of BCS-like pairing of composite fermions, however, suggest that its ground state is spin-polarized. In this talk, I will first review the earlier experiments and then present our recent experimental results showing evidence for a spin-polarized state at ν=5/2. Our ultra-low temperature experiments on a high quality sample established the fully developed FQHE state at ν=5/2 as well as at ν=7/3 and 8/3, manifested by a vanishing R_xx and exact quantization of the Hall plateau. The tilted field experiments showed that the added in-plane magnetic fields not only destroyed the FQHE at ν=5/2, as seen before, but also induced an electrical anisotropy, which is now interpreted as a phase transition from a paired, spin-polarized ν=5/2 state to a stripe phase, not unlike the ones at ν=9/2, 11/2, etc in the N > 1 higher Landau levels. Furthermore, in the experiments on the heterojunction insulated-gate field-effect transistors (HIGFET) at dilution refrigerator temperatures, a strong R_xx minimum and a concomitant developing Hall plateau were observed at ν=5/2 in a magnetic field as high as 12.6 Tesla. This and the subsequent density dependent studies of its energy gap largely rule out a spin-singlet state and point quite convincingly towards a spin-polarized ground state at ν=5/2.

  16. Influence of the magnetic field configuration on the plasma flow in Hall thrusters

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Andreussi, T.; Giannetti, V.; Leporini, A.; Saravia, M. M.; Andrenucci, M.

    2018-01-01

    In Hall propulsion, the thrust is provided by the acceleration of ions in a plasma generated in a cross-field configuration. Standard thruster configurations have annular channels with an almost radial magnetic field at the channel exit. A potential difference is imposed in the axial direction and the intensity of the magnetic field is calibrated in order to hinder the electron motion, while leaving the ions non-magnetised. Magnetic field lines can be assumed, as a first approximation, as lines of constant electron temperature and of thermalized potential. In typical thruster configurations, the discharge occurs inside a ceramic channel and, due to plasma-wall interactions, the electron temperature is typically low, less than few tens of eV. Hence, the magnetic field lines can be effectively used to tailor the distribution of the electrostatic potential. However, the erosion of the ceramic walls caused by the ion bombardment represents the main limiting factor of the thruster lifetime and new thruster configurations are currently under development. For these configurations, classical first order models of the plasma dynamics fail to grasp the influence of the magnetic topology on the plasma flow. In the present paper, a novel approach to investigate the correlation between magnetic field topology and thruster performance is presented. Due to the anisotropy induced by the magnetic field, the gradients of the plasma properties are assumed to be mainly in the direction orthogonal to the local magnetic field, thus enabling a quasi-one-dimensional description in magnetic coordinates. Theoretical and experimental investigations performed on a 5 kW class Hall thruster with different magnetic field configurations are then presented and discussed.

  17. Hall Effect Thruster Plume Contamination and Erosion Study

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Jaworske, Donald A.

    2000-01-01

    The objective of the Hall effect thruster plume contamination and erosion study was to evaluate the impact of a xenon ion plume on various samples placed in the vicinity of a Hall effect thruster for a continuous 100 hour exposure. NASA Glenn Research Center was responsible for the pre- and post-test evaluation of three sample types placed around the thruster: solar cell cover glass, RTV silicone, and Kapton(R). Mass and profilometer), were used to identify the degree of deposition and/or erosion on the solar cell cover glass, RTV silicone, and Kapton@ samples. Transmittance, reflectance, solar absorptance, and room temperature emittance were used to identify the degree of performance degradation of the solar cell cover glass samples alone. Auger spectroscopy was used to identify the chemical constituents found on the surface of the exposed solar cell cover glass samples. Chemical analysis indicated some boron nitride contamination on the samples, from boron nitride insulators used in the body of the thruster. However, erosion outweighted contamination. All samples exhibited some degree of erosion. with the most erosion occurring near the centerline of the plume and the least occurring at the +/- 90 deg positions. For the solar cell cover glass samples, erosion progressed through the antireflective coating and into the microsheet glass itself. Erosion occurred in the solar cell cover glass, RTV silicone and Kapton(R) at different rates. All optical properties changed with the degree of erosion, with solar absorptance and room temperature emittance increasing with erosion. The transmittance of some samples decreased while the reflectance of some samples increased and others decreased. All results are consistent with an energetic plume of xenon ions serving as a source for erosion.

  18. Reply to ''Comment on 'Mutually unbiased bases, orthogonal Latin squares, and hidden-variable models'''

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Paterek, Tomasz; Dakic, Borivoje; Brukner, Caslav

    In this Reply to the preceding Comment by Hall and Rao [Phys. Rev. A 83, 036101 (2011)], we motivate terminology of our original paper and point out that further research is needed in order to (dis)prove the claimed link between every orthogonal Latin square of order being a power of a prime and a mutually unbiased basis.

  19. Employment of Former Foster Youth as Young Adults: Evidence from the Midwest Study. Chapin Hall Issue Brief

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Hook, Jennifer L.; Courtney, Mark

    2010-01-01

    In this issue brief, the authors explore how former foster youth in Illinois, Wisconsin, and Iowa are faring in the labor market and what explains the variability in employment outcomes for these youth. First, they describe trends in former foster youths' employment from age 17 to 24. Then, they consider how former foster youths' characteristics…

  20. Different annealing temperature suitable for different Mg doped P-GaN

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Liu, S. T.; Yang, J.; Zhao, D. G.; Jiang, D. S.; Liang, F.; Chen, P.; Zhu, J. J.; Liu, Z. S.; Li, X.; Liu, W.; Zhang, L. Q.; Long, H.; Li, M.

    2017-04-01

    In this work, epitaxial GaN with different Mg doping concentration annealed at different temperature is investigated. Through Hall and PL spectra measurement we found that when Mg doping concentration is different, different annealing temperature is needed for obtaining the best p-type conduction of GaN, and this difference comes from the different influence of annealing on compensated donors. For ultra-heavily Mg doped sample, the process of Mg related donors transferring to non-radiative recombination centers is dominated, so the performance of P-GaN deteriorates with temperature increase. But for low Mg doped sample, the process of Mg related donors transfer to non-raditive recombination is weak compare to the Mg acceptor activation, so along the annealing temperature increase the performance GaN gets better.

  1. Room-Temperature Determination of Two-Dimensional Electron Gas Concentration and Mobility in Heterostructures

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Schacham, S. E.; Mena, R. A.; Haugland, E. J.; Alterovitz, S. A.

    1993-01-01

    A technique for determination of room-temperature two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) concentration and mobility in heterostructures is presented. Using simultaneous fits of the longitudinal and transverse voltages as a function of applied magnetic field, we were able to separate the parameters associated with the 2DEG from those of the parallel layer. Comparison with the Shubnikov-de Haas data derived from measurements at liquid helium temperatures proves that the analysis of the room-temperature data provides an excellent estimate of the 2DEG concentration. In addition we were able to obtain for the first time the room-temperature mobility of the 2DEG, an important parameter to device application. Both results are significantly different from those derived from conventional Hall analysis.

  2. Magnetization and anomalous Hall effect in SiO2/Fe/SiO2 trilayers

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Sekhar Das, Sudhansu; Senthil Kumar, M.

    2017-03-01

    SiO2/Fe/SiO2 sandwich structure films fabricated by sputtering were studied by varying the Fe layer thickness (t Fe). The structural and microstructural studies on the samples showed that the Fe layer has grown in nanocrystalline form with (1 1 0) texture and that the two SiO2 layers are amorphous. Magnetic measurements performed with the applied field in in-plane and perpendicular direction to the film plane confirmed that the samples are soft ferromagnetic having strong in-plane magnetic anisotropy. The temperature dependence of magnetization shows complex behavior with the coexistence of both ferromagnetic and superparamagnetic properties. The transport properties of the samples as studied through Hall effect measurements show anomalous Hall effect (AHE). An enhancement of about 14 times in the saturation anomalous Hall resistance (R\\text{hs}\\text{A} ) was observed upon reducing the t Fe from 300 to 50 Å. The maximum value of R\\text{hs}\\text{A}   =  2.3 Ω observed for t Fe  =  50 Å sample is about 4 orders of magnitude larger than that reported for bulk Fe. When compared with the single Fe film, a maximum increase of about 56% in the R\\text{hs}\\text{A} was observed in sandwiched Fe (50 Å) film. Scaling law suggests that the R s follows the longitudinal resistivity (ρ) as, {{R}\\text{s}}\\propto {ρ1.9} , suggesting side jump as the dominant mechanism of the AHE. A maximum enhancement of about 156% in the sensitivity S was observed.

  3. Large anomalous Nernst and spin Nernst effects in the noncollinear antiferromagnets Mn3X (X =Sn ,Ge ,Ga )

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Guo, Guang-Yu; Wang, Tzu-Cheng

    2017-12-01

    Noncollinear antiferromagnets have recently been attracting considerable interest partly due to recent surprising discoveries of the anomalous Hall effect (AHE) in them and partly because they have promising applications in antiferromagnetic spintronics. Here we study the anomalous Nernst effect (ANE), a phenomenon having the same origin as the AHE, and also the spin Nernst effect (SNE) as well as AHE and the spin Hall effect (SHE) in noncollinear antiferromagnetic Mn3X (X =Sn , Ge, Ga) within the Berry phase formalism based on ab initio relativistic band structure calculations. For comparison, we also calculate the anomalous Nernst conductivity (ANC) and anomalous Hall conductivity (AHC) of ferromagnetic iron as well as the spin Nernst conductivity (SNC) of platinum metal. Remarkably, the calculated ANC at room temperature (300 K) for all three alloys is huge, being 10-40 times larger than that of iron. Moreover, the calculated SNC for Mn3Sn and Mn3Ga is also larger, being about five times larger than that of platinum. This suggests that these antiferromagnets would be useful materials for thermoelectronic devices and spin caloritronic devices. The calculated ANC of Mn3Sn and iron are in reasonably good agreement with the very recent experiments. The calculated SNC of platinum also agrees with the very recent experiments in both sign and magnitude. The calculated thermoelectric and thermomagnetic properties are analyzed in terms of the band structures as well as the energy-dependent AHC, ANC, SNC, and spin Hall conductivity via the Mott relations.

  4. Cross-field diffusion in Hall thrusters and other plasma thrusters

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Boeuf, J. P.

    2012-10-01

    Understanding and quantifying electron transport perpendicular to the magnetic field is a challenge in many low temperature plasma applications. Hall effect thrusters (HETs) provide an excellent example of cross-field transport. The HET is a very successful concept that can be considered both as a gridless ion source and an electromagnetic thruster. In HETs, the electric field E accelerating the ions is a consequence of the Lorentz force due to an external magnetic field B acting on the ExB Hall electron current. An essential aspect of HETs is that the ExB drift is closed, i.e. is in the azimuthal direction of a cylindrical channel. In the first part of this presentation we will discuss the physics of cross-field electron transport in HETs, and the current understanding (or non-understanding) of the possible role of turbulence and wall collisions on cross-field diffusion. We will also briefly comment on alternative designs of ion sources based on the same principles as the conventional HET (Anode Layer Thruster, Diverging Cusp Field Thrusters, End-Hall ion sources). In a second part of the presentation we show that the Lorentz force acting on diamagnetic currents (associated with the ∇PexB term in the electron momentum equation) can also provide thrust. This is the case for example in helicon thrusters where the plasma expands in a magnetic nozzle. We will report and discuss recent work on helicon thrusters and other devices where the diamagnetic current is dominant (with some examples where the ∇PexB current is not closed and is directed toward a wall!).

  5. Adiabatic photo-steering theory in topological insulators.

    PubMed

    Inoue, Jun-Ichi

    2014-12-01

    Feasible external control of material properties is a crucial issue in condensed matter physics. A new approach to achieving this aim, named adiabatic photo-steering, is reviewed. The core principle of this scheme is that several material constants are effectively turned into externally tunable variables by irradiation of monochromatic laser light. Two-dimensional topological insulators are selected as the optimal systems that exhibit a prominent change in their properties following the application of this method. Two specific examples of photo-steered quantum phenomena, which reflect topological aspects of the electronic systems at hand, are presented. One is the integer quantum Hall effect described by the Haldane model, and the other is the quantum spin Hall effect described by the Kane-Mele model. The topological quantities associated with these phenomena are the conventional Chern number and spin Chern number, respectively. A recent interesting idea, time-reversal symmetry breaking via a temporary periodic external stimulation, is also discussed.

  6. Adiabatic photo-steering theory in topological insulators

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Inoue, Jun-ichi

    2014-12-01

    Feasible external control of material properties is a crucial issue in condensed matter physics. A new approach to achieving this aim, named adiabatic photo-steering, is reviewed. The core principle of this scheme is that several material constants are effectively turned into externally tunable variables by irradiation of monochromatic laser light. Two-dimensional topological insulators are selected as the optimal systems that exhibit a prominent change in their properties following the application of this method. Two specific examples of photo-steered quantum phenomena, which reflect topological aspects of the electronic systems at hand, are presented. One is the integer quantum Hall effect described by the Haldane model, and the other is the quantum spin Hall effect described by the Kane-Mele model. The topological quantities associated with these phenomena are the conventional Chern number and spin Chern number, respectively. A recent interesting idea, time-reversal symmetry breaking via a temporary periodic external stimulation, is also discussed.

  7. Enhancing the Curie temperature of ferromagnetic semiconductor (Ga,Mn)As to 200 K via nanostructure engineering.

    PubMed

    Chen, Lin; Yang, Xiang; Yang, Fuhua; Zhao, Jianhua; Misuraca, Jennifer; Xiong, Peng; von Molnár, Stephan

    2011-07-13

    We demonstrate by magneto-transport measurements that a Curie temperature as high as 200 K can be obtained in nanostructures of (Ga,Mn)As. Heavily Mn-doped (Ga,Mn)As films were patterned into nanowires and then subject to low-temperature annealing. Resistance and Hall effect measurements demonstrated a consistent increase of T(C) with decreasing wire width down to about 300 nm. This observation is attributed primarily to the increase of the free surface in the narrower wires, which allows the Mn interstitials to diffuse out at the sidewalls, thus enhancing the efficiency of annealing. These results may provide useful information on optimal structures for (Ga,Mn)As-based nanospintronic devices operational at relatively high temperatures.

  8. Growth and characterization of (110) InAs quantum well metamorphic heterostructures

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Podpirka, Adrian A., E-mail: adrian.podpirka.ctr@nrl.navy.mil; Katz, Michael B.; Twigg, Mark E.

    An understanding of the growth of (110) quantum wells (QWs) is of great importance to spin systems due to the observed long spin relaxation times. In this article, we report on the metamorphic growth and characterization of high mobility undoped InAs (110) QWs on GaAs (110) substrates. A low-temperature nucleation layer reduces dislocation density, results in tilting of the subsequent buffer layer and increases the electron mobility of the QW structure. The mobility varies widely and systematically (4000–16 000 cm{sup 2}/Vs at room temperature) with deposition temperature and layer thicknesses. Low-temperature transport measurements exhibit Shubnikov de-Haas oscillations and quantized plateaus in themore » quantum Hall regime.« less

  9. Room-temperature observation and current control of skyrmions in Pt/Co/Os/Pt thin films

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Tolley, R.; Montoya, S. A.; Fullerton, E. E.

    2018-04-01

    We report the observation of room-temperature magnetic skyrmions in Pt/Co/Os/Pt thin-film heterostructures and their response to electric currents. The magnetic properties are extremely sensitive to inserting thin Os layers between the Co-Pt interface, resulting in reduced saturation magnetization, magnetic anisotropy, and Curie temperature. The observed skyrmions exist in a narrow temperature, applied-field and layer-thickness range near the spin-reorientation transition from perpendicular to in-plane magnetic anisotropy. The skyrmions have an average diameter of 2.3 μ m and transport measurements demonstrate these features can be displaced by means of spin-orbit torques with current densities as low as J =2 ×108A / m2 and display a skyrmion Hall effect.

  10. Experimental researches on quantum transport in semiconductor two-dimensional electron systems

    PubMed Central

    Kawaji, Shinji

    2008-01-01

    The author reviews contribution of Gakushuin University group to the progress of the quantum transport in semiconductor two-dimensional electron systems (2DES) for forty years from the birth of the 2DES in middle of the 1960s till the finding of temperature dependent collapse of the quantized Hall resistance in the beginning of this century. PMID:18941299

  11. In situ Raman Spectroscopy Study of the Formation of Graphene from Urea and Graphite Oxide

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2012-09-01

    pp. 075404, Aug., 2006. [5] K. S. Novoselov, Z. Jiang, Y. Zhang, S. Morozov, H. Stormer , U. Zeitler, J. Maan, G. Boebinger, P. Kim, and A. Geim...Room-temperature quantum hall effect in graphene.” Science, vol. 315, no. 5817, pp. 1379, Mar., 2007. [6] Y. Zhang, Y. W. Tan, H. L. Stormer , and

  12. Factors for MPD Thrustors.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1986-05-01

    sense that no wave proption is involved. To look for the Hall hpq62 1,I1 K 1, W111,1,1,1 I pamsmet’ under which condition the plasma with heat...is by a three- body c-c-i process. n, ~ o = r v- - c( n r), (applS ( ,A 1 are function of electron temperature only.) In equilibrium. r~e - 0 (Let us

  13. Enhanced surface transfer doping of diamond by V{sub 2}O{sub 5} with improved thermal stability

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Crawford, Kevin G., E-mail: k.crawford.2@research.gla.ac.uk; Moran, David A. J.; Cao, Liang

    2016-01-25

    Surface transfer doping of hydrogen-terminated diamond has been achieved utilising V{sub 2}O{sub 5} as a surface electron accepting material. Contact between the oxide and diamond surface promotes the transfer of electrons from the diamond into the V{sub 2}O{sub 5} as revealed by the synchrotron-based high resolution photoemission spectroscopy. Electrical characterization by Hall measurement performed before and after V{sub 2}O{sub 5} deposition shows an increase in hole carrier concentration in the diamond from 3.0 × 10{sup 12} to 1.8 × 10{sup 13 }cm{sup −2} at room temperature. High temperature Hall measurements performed up to 300 °C in atmosphere reveal greatly enhanced thermal stability of the hole channelmore » produced using V{sub 2}O{sub 5} in comparison with an air-induced surface conduction channel. Transfer doping of hydrogen-terminated diamond using high electron affinity oxides such as V{sub 2}O{sub 5} is a promising approach for achieving thermally stable, high performance diamond based devices in comparison with air-induced surface transfer doping.« less

  14. Analysis of Deformations of the Skylight Construction at the Main Hall of the Warsaw University of Technology

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Odziemczyk, Waldemar

    2015-02-01

    The paper presents technology and results of measurements of the steel construction of the skylight of the Main Hall of the Warsaw University of Technology. The new version of the automated measuring system has been used for measurements. This system is based on Leica TCRP1201+ total station and the TCcalc1200 software application, developed by the author, which operates on a laptop computer connected with the total station by the wire. Two test measurements were performed. Each of them consisted of cyclic measurement using the polar method, from one station; points located on the skylight construction, as well as control points located on concrete, bearing poles, were successively measured. Besides geometrical values (such as Hz, V angles and the slope distance D), the changes of temperature and atmospheric pressure, were also recorded. Processed results of measurements contained information concerning the behaviour of the skylight; asymmetry of horizontal displacements with respect to the X axis have been proved. Changes of parameters of the instrument telescope and changes of the instrument orientation were also stated; they were connected with changes of the temperature. The most important results of works have been presented in the form of diagrams.

  15. An interchangeable scanning Hall probe/scanning SQUID microscope

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Tang, Chiu-Chun; Lin, Hui-Ting; Wu, Sing-Lin

    2014-08-15

    We have constructed a scanning probe microscope for magnetic imaging, which can function as a scanning Hall probe microscope (SHPM) and as a scanning SQUID microscope (SSM). The scanning scheme, applicable to SHPM and SSM, consists of a mechanical positioning (sub) micron-XY stage and a flexible direct contact to the sample without a feedback control system for the Z-axis. With the interchangeable capability of operating two distinct scanning modes, our microscope can incorporate the advantageous functionalities of the SHPM and SSM with large scan range up to millimeter, high spatial resolution (⩽4 μm), and high field sensitivity in a widemore » range of temperature (4.2 K-300 K) and magnetic field (10{sup −7} T-1 T). To demonstrate the capabilities of the system, we present magnetic images scanned with SHPM and SSM, including a RbFeB magnet and a nickel grid pattern at room temperature, surface magnetic domain structures of a La{sub 2/3}Ca{sub 1/3}MnO{sub 3} thin film at 77 K, and superconducting vortices in a striped niobium film at 4.2 K.« less

  16. [Growth inhibition of Vibrio parahaemolyticus in seafood by tabletop dry ice cooler].

    PubMed

    Maruyama, Yumi; Kimura, Bon; Fujii, Tateo; Tokunaga, Yoshinori; Matsubayashi, Megumi; Aikawa, Yasushi

    2005-10-01

    Tabletop dry ice coolers (three types; dome model, cap model and tripod model), which are used in kitchens and hotel banquet halls to refrigerate fresh seafood, were investigated to determine whether growth of Vibrio parahaemolyticus was inhibited by their use. On TSA plates containing 1.8% NaCl and fresh seafood (fillets of squid, pink shrimp and yellowtail), V. parahaemolyticus (O3:K6, TDH+) inoculated at 4 to 5 log CFU/sample and left at ambient temperature (25 degrees C) grew by 1.0 to 2.8 orders in 4 hours. In contrast, with tabletop coolers no significant increase in viable count occurred in 3 to 4 hours, confirming that tabletop coolers inhibited the growth of V. parahaemolyticus. The temperature in each tabletop cooler was kept below 10 degrees C for 80 to 135 min, though the CO2 gas concentration in them remained high for only a short time (0 to 75 min). It was presumed that the refrigeration function mainly contributed to growth inhibition. Our results indicate that tabletop dry ice coolers are helpful for prevention of food-borne disease due to V. parahaemolyticus in food-service locations, such as kitchens and banquet halls.

  17. Plasma Perturbations in High-Speed Probing of Hall Thruster Discharge Chambers: Quantification and Mitigation

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Jorns, Benjamin A.; Goebel, Dan M.; Hofer, Richard R.

    2015-01-01

    An experimental investigation is presented to quantify the effect of high-speed probing on the plasma parameters inside the discharge chamber of a 6-kW Hall thruster. Understanding the nature of these perturbations is of significant interest given the importance of accurate plasma measurements for characterizing thruster operation. An array of diagnostics including a high-speed camera and embedded wall probes is employed to examine in real time the changes in electron temperature and plasma potential induced by inserting a high-speed reciprocating Langmuir probe into the discharge chamber. It is found that the perturbations onset when the scanning probe is downstream of the electron temperature peak, and that along channel centerline, the perturbations are best characterized as a downstream shift of plasma parameters by 15-20% the length of the discharge chamber. A parametric study is performed to investigate techniques to mitigate the observed probe perturbations including varying probe speed, probe location, and operating conditions. It is found that the perturbations largely disappear when the thruster is operated at low power and low discharge voltage. The results of this mitigation study are discussed in the context of recommended methods for generating unperturbed measurements of the discharge chamber plasma.

  18. Electrical transport properties in Fe-Cr nanocluster-assembled granular films

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Wang, Xiong-Zhi; Wang, Lai-Sen; Zhang, Qin-Fu; Liu, Xiang; Xie, Jia; Su, A.-Mei; Zheng, Hong-Fei; Peng, Dong-Liang

    2017-09-01

    The Fe100-xCrx nanocluster-assembled granular films with Cr atomic fraction (x) ranging from 0 to 100 were fabricated by using a plasma-gas-condensation cluster deposition system. The TEM characterization revealed that the uniform Fe clusters were coated with a Cr layer to form a Fe-Cr core-shell structure. Then, the as-prepared Fe100-xCrx nanoclusters were randomly assembled into a granular film in vacuum environments with increasing the deposition time. Because of the competition between interfacial resistance and shunting effect of Cr layer, the room temperature resistivity of the Fe100-xCrx nanocluster-assembled granular films first increased and then decreased with increasing the Cr atomic fraction (x), and revealed a maximum of 2 × 104 μΩ cm at x = 26 at.%. The temperature-dependent longitudinal resistivity (ρxx), magnetoresistance (MR) effect and anomalous Hall effect (AHE) of these Fe100-xCrx nanocluster-assembled granular films were also studied systematically. As the x increased from 0 to 100, the ρxx of all samples firstly decreased and then increased with increasing the measuring temperature. The dependence of ρxx on temperature could be well addressed by a mechanism incorporated for the fluctuation-induced-tunneling (FIT) conduction process and temperature-dependent scattering effect. It was found that the anomalous Hall effect (AHE) had no legible scaling relation in Fe100-xCrx nanocluster-assembled granular films. However, after deducting the contribution of tunneling effect, the scaling relation was unambiguous. Additionally, the Fe100-xCrx nanocluster-assembled granular films revealed a small negative magnetoresistance (MR), which decreased with the increase of x. The detailed physical mechanism of the electrical transport properties in these Fe100-xCrx nanocluster-assembled granular films was also studied.

  19. Microinhomogeneities in Semi-Insulating Cd(Zn)Te

    DOE PAGES

    Fochuk, P.; Nykoniuk, Y.; Zakharuk, Z.; ...

    2017-09-04

    Here, we investigated the temperature dependences (TDs) in the range of 290-423 K for the Hall constant R H and the Hall carrier mobility μn (σ R H) in semi-insulating Cd 0.9 Zn 0.1 Te:In (CZT) crystals. As-grown, CZT material has nonequilibrium distributions of native and impurity-related defects. Thus, before taking any measurements, the samples were kept inside the test chamber in the dark at 423 K to reach an equilibrium state at T <; 423 K. For all the tested samples, the R H TD could be described by two activation energies. At the transitional point, the TD ofmore » the carrier mobility also changes from “normal” at high temperatures to “exponential” at low temperatures. The latter is a result of the collective effect of drift barriers due to microinhomogeneity. Therefore, only the high-temperature activation energies can be assigned to the ionization energies of the compensated deep donors (ε D). For different samples, the values for ε D 0 (at absolute zero) were found to be in the range of 0.50-0.78 eV, and the degree of donor compensation [D +]/[D] is between 0.3 and 0.98. The low-temperature region, where there are strong effects of crystal microinhomogeneities, cannot be used to characterize the ionization energy of donors. Therefore, we describe the activation energy as ε 1 = ε D - αε b, where ε b is the drift barrier height found from the TD of the carrier mobility and α takes a value close to unity. Values of ε b for our studied samples lie within (0.05-0.35) eV.« less

  20. DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Fochuk, P.; Nykoniuk, Y.; Zakharuk, Z.

    Here, we investigated the temperature dependences (TDs) in the range of 290-423 K for the Hall constant R H and the Hall carrier mobility μn (σ R H) in semi-insulating Cd 0.9 Zn 0.1 Te:In (CZT) crystals. As-grown, CZT material has nonequilibrium distributions of native and impurity-related defects. Thus, before taking any measurements, the samples were kept inside the test chamber in the dark at 423 K to reach an equilibrium state at T <; 423 K. For all the tested samples, the R H TD could be described by two activation energies. At the transitional point, the TD ofmore » the carrier mobility also changes from “normal” at high temperatures to “exponential” at low temperatures. The latter is a result of the collective effect of drift barriers due to microinhomogeneity. Therefore, only the high-temperature activation energies can be assigned to the ionization energies of the compensated deep donors (ε D). For different samples, the values for ε D 0 (at absolute zero) were found to be in the range of 0.50-0.78 eV, and the degree of donor compensation [D +]/[D] is between 0.3 and 0.98. The low-temperature region, where there are strong effects of crystal microinhomogeneities, cannot be used to characterize the ionization energy of donors. Therefore, we describe the activation energy as ε 1 = ε D - αε b, where ε b is the drift barrier height found from the TD of the carrier mobility and α takes a value close to unity. Values of ε b for our studied samples lie within (0.05-0.35) eV.« less

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