Enhanced magnetic field sensitivity of spin-dependent transport in cluster-assembled metallic nanostructures
- PMID: 16906140
- DOI: 10.1038/nmat1713
Enhanced magnetic field sensitivity of spin-dependent transport in cluster-assembled metallic nanostructures
Abstract
The emerging field of spintronics explores the many possibilities offered by the prospect of using the spin of the electrons for fast, nanosized electronic devices. The effect of magnetization acting on a current is the essence of giant or tunnel magnetoresistance. Although such spintronics effects already find technological applications, much of the underlying physics remains to be explored. The aim of this article is to demonstrate the importance of spin mixing in metallic nanostructures. Here we show that magnetic clusters embedded in a metallic matrix exhibit a giant magnetic response of more than 500% at low temperature, using a recently developed thermoelectric measurement. This method eliminates the dominating resistivity component of the magnetic response and thus reveals an intrinsic spin-dependent process: the conduction-electron spin precession about the exchange field as the electron crosses the clusters, giving rise to a spin-mixing mechanism with strong field dependence. This effect appears sensibly only in the smallest clusters, that is, at the level of less than 100 atoms per cluster.
Comment in
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Spintronics: Magnetism's ticklish giant.Nat Mater. 2006 Sep;5(9):677-8. doi: 10.1038/nmat1722. Nat Mater. 2006. PMID: 16946724 No abstract available.
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Origin of the magneto-thermogalvanic voltage in cluster-assembled metallic nanostructures.Nat Mater. 2008 Apr;7(4):257; author reply 258. doi: 10.1038/nmat2153a. Nat Mater. 2008. PMID: 18354402 No abstract available.
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