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Analysis of the transient response of nuclear spins in GaAs with/without nuclear magnetic resonance
Author(s) -
Mahmoud Rasly,
Zhichao Lin,
Masafumi Yamamoto,
Tetsuya Uemura
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
aip advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.421
H-Index - 58
ISSN - 2158-3226
DOI - 10.1063/1.4943610
Subject(s) - spins , physics , free induction decay , spin polarization , condensed matter physics , hyperfine structure , polarization (electrochemistry) , spin echo , magnetic field , spin (aerodynamics) , nuclear magnetic resonance , atomic physics , chemistry , electron , nuclear physics , quantum mechanics , magnetic resonance imaging , medicine , radiology , thermodynamics
As an alternative to studying the steady-state responses of nuclear spins in solid state systems, working within a transient-state framework can reveal interesting phenomena. The response of nuclear spins in GaAs to a changing magnetic field was analyzed based on the time evolution of nuclear spin temperature. Simulation results well reproduced our experimental results for the transient oblique Hanle signals observed in an all-electrical spin injection device. The analysis showed that the so called dynamic nuclear polarization can be treated as a cooling tool for the nuclear spins: It works as a provider to exchange spin angular momentum between polarized electron spins and nuclear spins through the hyperfine interaction, leading to an increase in the nuclear polarization. In addition, a time-delay of the nuclear spin temperature with a fast sweep of the external magnetic field produces a possible transient state for the nuclear spin polarization. On the other hand, the nuclear magnetic resonance acts as a heating tool for a nuclear spin system. This causes the nuclear spin temperature to jump to infinity: i.e., the average nuclear spins along with the nuclear field vanish at resonant fields of As-75, Ga-69 and Ga-71, showing an interesting step-dip structure in the oblique Hanle signals. These analyses provide a quantitative understanding of nuclear spin dynamics in semiconductors for application in future computation processing

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