We present an investigation of heat transport in gapless graphene-based Ferromagnetic /singlet Superconductor/Ferromagnetic (FG|SG|FG) junctions. We find that unlike uniform increase of thermal conductance vs temperature, the thermal conductance exhibits intensive oscillatory behavior vs width of the sandwiched s-wave superconducting region between the two ferromagnetic layers. This oscillatory form is occurred by interference of the massless Dirac fermions in graphene. Also we find that the thermal conductance vs exchange field h displays a minimal value at h/E F 1 within the low temperature regime where this finding demonstrates that propagating modes of the Dirac fermions in this value reach at their minimum numbers and verifies the previous results for electronic conductance. We find that for thin widths of superconducting region, the thermal conductance vs temperature shows linear increment i.e. Γ ∝ T . At last we propose an experimental set-up to detect our predicted effects.
We study the tunneling magneto-transport properties of the Ferromagnetic Insulator-Normal Insulator-Ferromagnetic Insulator(F|N|F) and Ferromagnetic Insulator-Barrier Insulator-Ferromagnetic Insulator (F|B|F) junctions on the surface of topological insulator in which in-plane magnetization directions of both ferromagnetic sides can be parallel and antiparallel. We derive analytical expressions for electronic conductances of the two mentioned junctions with both parallel and antiparallel directions of magnetization and using them calculate magnetoresistance of the two junctions. We use thin barrier approximation for investigating the F|B|F junction. We find that although magnetoresistance of the F|N|F and F|B|F junctions are tunable by changing the strength of magnetization texture, they show different behaviors with variation of magnetization. In contrast to the magnetoresistance of F|N|F, magnetoresistance of F|B|F junctions shows very smooth enhance by increasing the strength of magnetization. We suggest an experimental set up to detect our predicted effects.
We study the ground state phase diagram of a frustrated spin-1/2 four-leg
tube. Using a variety of complementary techniques, namely density matrix
renormalization group, exact diagonalization, Schwinger boson mean field
theory, quantum Monte-Carlo and series expansion, we explore the parameter
space of this model in the regime of all-antiferromagnetic exchange. In
contrast to unfrustrated four-leg tubes we uncover a rich phase diagram. Apart
from the Luttinger liquid fixed point in the limit of decoupled legs, this
comprises several gapped ground states, namely a plaquette, an incommensurate,
and an antiferromagnetic quasi spin-2 chain phase. The transitions between
these phases are analyzed in terms of total energy and static structure factor
calculations and are found to be of (weak) first order. Despite the absence of
long range order in the quantum case, remarkable similarities to the classical
phase diagram are uncovered, with the exception of the icommensurate regime,
which is strongly renormalized by quantum fluctuations. In the limit of large
leg exchange the tube exhibits a deconfinement cross-over from gapped magnon
like excitations to spinons.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figure
Charge and spin Josephson currents in a ballistic superconductor-ferromagnet-superconductor junction with spin-triplet pairing symmetry are studied using the quasiclassical Eilenberger equation. The gap vector of superconductors has an arbitrary relative angle with respect to magnetization of the ferromagnetic layer. We clarify the effects of the thickness of ferromagnetic layer and magnitude of the magnetization on the Josephson charge and spin currents. We find that 0-π transition can occur except for the case that the exchange field and d-vector are in nearly perpendicular configuration. We also show how spin current flows due to misorientation between the exchange field and d-vector.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.