Final Report: Novel Nanowires as Probes of Electron Coherence and Correlations in Restricted Geometries
This is a final summary report of the research conducted under DE-FG03-01ER45946, which was a research program using metal nanostructures to examine quantum coherence of electrons in normal and ferromagnetic metals. This program was the PI's first federal research grant, and by augmenting with other funds (Packard Foundation), this grant supported two graduate students during its duration. In normal metal nanostructures, quantum coherence was assessed by two independent techniques: weak localization magnetoresistance, and time-dependent universal conductance fluctuations (TDUCF noise). This work found that, in AuPd nanowires, the coherence information inferred from these two techniques were quantitatively consistent, even in the presence of magnetic impurity and phonon scattering. This confirmed theoretical expectations. However, in Ag and Au wires, the two techniques disagree, with noise measurements indicating a lower coherence length at low temperatures than weak localization. We have a candidate explanation for this, and are finishing these experiments. This work shows that subtleties remain in our understanding of coherence processes even in normal metals, particularly those involving the tunneling two-level systems that produce low frequency noise; this has relevance for quantum information processing implementations using metal devices. We have also studied time-dependent universal conductance fluctuations in ferromagnetic metals for the first time. The TDUCF in ferromagnetic nanowires show that the Cooperon channel of coherent processes is suppressed in these correlated materials. Furthermore, the surprisingly steep temperature dependence of the noise suggests that decoherence in these systems is through a different process than in normal metals. We are finishing measurements of ''magnetofingerprint'' conductance fluctuations in ferromagnetic metals to examine this unusual temperature dependence with an independent technique. This program has produced three papers (one Phys. Rev. B Rapid Communication, one PRB Brief Report, and a longer PRB article), with two more in preparation; it has also resulted in six APS contributed talks by students, and two invited seminars by the PI.
- Research Organization:
- Rice University, Houston, TX
- Sponsoring Organization:
- USDOE - Office of Energy Research (ER)
- DOE Contract Number:
- FG03-01ER45946
- OSTI ID:
- 899021
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
Similar Records
Final Report: Biological and Synthetic Nanostructures Controlled at the Atomistic Level
Metal Induced Embrittlement and The Role of Defect Structures in Grain Boundaries on the Deformation and Fracture Behavior of Crystalline Solids (Grant DE-FG06-87ER45287 Summary Accomplishments)
Related Subjects
75 CONDENSED MATTER PHYSICS
SUPERCONDUCTIVITY AND SUPERFLUIDITY
COHERENCE LENGTH
ELECTRONS
FLUCTUATIONS
MAGNETORESISTANCE
NANOSTRUCTURES
PHONONS
PROBES
PROCESSING
QUANTUM INFORMATION
RESEARCH PROGRAMS
SCATTERING
TEMPERATURE DEPENDENCE
TUNNELING
quantum coherence
nanostructures