No Arabic abstract
Bismuth chalcogenides Bi$_2$Se$_3$ and Bi$_2$Te$_3$ are semiconductors, which can be both thermoelectric materials (TE) and topological insulators (TI). Lattice defects arising from vacancies, impurities, or dopants in these materials are important in that they provide the charge carriers in TE applications and compromise the performance of these materials as TIs. We present the first solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) study of the $^{77}$Se and $^{125}$Te NMR resonances in polycrystalline powders of Bi$_2$Se$_3$ and Bi$_2$Te$_3$, respectively. The spin-lattice ($T_1$) relaxation is modeled by at most two exponentials. Within the framework of this model, the NMR measurement is sensitive to the distribution of native defects within these materials. One component corresponds to a stoichiometric fraction, an insulator with a very long $T_1$, whereas the other component is attributed to a sample fraction with high defect content with a short $T_1$ resulting from interaction with the conduction carriers. The absence of a very long $T_1$ in the bismuth telluride suggests defects throughout the sample. For the bismuth selenide, defect regions segregate into domains. We also find a substantial difference in the short $T_1$ component for $^{125}$Te nuclei (76 ms) and $^{77}$Se (0.63 s) in spite of the fact that these materials have nearly identical lattice structures, chemical and physical properties. Investigations of the NMR shift and Korringa law indicate that the coupling to the conduction band electrons at the chalcogenide sites is much stronger in the telluride. The results are consistent with a stronger spin-orbit coupling (SOC) to the $p$-band electrons in the telluride. If most parameters of a given material are kept equal, this type of experiment could provide a useful probe of SOC in engineered TI materials.
We report ultrafast surface pump and interface probe experiments on photoexcited carrier transport across single crystal bismuth films on sapphire. The film thickness is sufficient to separate carrier dynamics from lattice heating and strain, allowing us to investigate the time-scales of momentum relaxation, heat transfer to the lattice and electron-hole recombination. The measured electron-hole ($e-h$) recombination time is 12--26 ps and ambipolar diffusivity is 18--40 cm$^{2}$/s for carrier excitation up to $sim 10^{19} text{cm}^{-3}$. By comparing the heating of the front and back sides of the film, we put lower limits on the rate of heat transfer to the lattice, and by observing the decay of the plasma at the back of the film, we estimate the timescale of electron-hole recombination. We interpret each of these timescales within a common framework of electron-phonon scattering and find qualitative agreement between the various relaxation times observed. We find that the carrier density is not determined by the $e-h$ plasma temperature after a few picoseconds. The diffusion and recombination become nonlinear with initial excitation $gtrsim 10^{20} text{cm}^{-3}$.
Spectroscopic techniques, including photoelectron spectroscopy, diffuse reflectance, and x-ray absorption, are used to investigate the electronic structure and the local structure of LaOBiS$_{2-x}$Se$_x$ thermoelectric material. It is found that Se substitution effectively suppresses local distortion, that can be responsible for the increased carrier mobility together with a change in the electronic structure. The results suggest a possible way to control thermoelectric properties by tuning of the local crystal structure of these materials.
The process of magnetic relaxation was studied in bismuth ferrite BiFeO3 multiferroic micro-cubes obtained by means of microwave assisted Pechini process. Two different mechanisms of relaxation were found. The first one is a rapid magnetic relaxation driven by the domain reorientations and/or pinning and motion of domain walls. This mechanism is also responsible for the irreversible properties at low temperatures. The power-law decay of the magnetic moment confirms that this relaxation takes place in the system of weakly interacting ferromagnetic or superferromagnetic domains. The second mechanism is a longterm weak magnetic relaxation due to spin glass-phase.
We investigate ultrafast demagnetization due to electron-phonon interaction in a model band-ferromagnet. We show that the microscopic mechanism behind the spin dynamics due to electron-phonon interaction is the interplay of scattering and the precession around momentum-dependent effective internal spin-orbit magnetic fields. The resulting magnetization dynamics can only be mimicked by spin-flip transitions if the spin precession around the internal fields is sufficiently fast (compared to the scattering time) so that it averages out the transverse spin components.
Time-resolved magneto-optics was used to study spin-lattice relaxation dynamics in thin epitaxial La0.7Sr0.3MnO3 films. Two distinct recovery regimes of the ferromagnetic order can be resolved upon photoexcitation, which manifest themselves by two different relaxation times. A pump pulse energy independent spin-lattice relaxation time can be deduced. Due to a weak spin-orbit coupling in manganites this spin-lattice relaxation time is much longer than in ferromagnetic metals. Heat flow into the substrate sets the ultimate recovery speed of the ferromagnetic order and allows for a determination of heat diffusion properties of manganite films.