Friday, August 24, 2012

1208.4745 (A. M. Burke et al.)

Extreme sensitivity of the spin-splitting and 0.7 anomaly to confining
potential in one-dimensional nanoelectronic devices
   [PDF]

A. M. Burke, O. Klochan, I. Farrer, D. A. Ritchie, A. R. Hamilton, A. P. Micolich
Quantum point contacts (QPCs) have shown promise as nanoscale spin-selective components for spintronic applications and are of fundamental interest in the study of electron many-body effects such as the 0.7 x 2e^2/h anomaly. We report on the dependence of the 1D Lande g-factor g* and 0.7 anomaly on electron density and confinement in QPCs with two different top-gate architectures. We obtain g* values up to 2.8 for the lowest 1D subband, significantly exceeding previous in-plane g-factor values in AlGaAs/GaAs QPCs, and approaching that in InGaAs/InP QPCs. We show that g* is highly sensitive to confinement potential, particularly for the lowest 1D subband. This suggests careful management of the QPC's confinement potential may enable the high g* desirable for spintronic applications without resorting to narrow-gap materials such as InAs or InSb. The 0.7 anomaly and zero-bias peak are also highly sensitive to confining potential, explaining the conflicting density dependencies of the 0.7 anomaly in the literature.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1208.4745

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