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Conductance and Kondo effect of a controlled single atom contact

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 Added by Limot Laurent
 Publication date 2006
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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The tip of a low-temperature scanning tunneling microscope is brought into contact with individual Kondo impurities (cobalt atoms) adsorbed on a Cu(100) surface. A smooth transition from the tunneling regime to a point contact with a conductance of $Gapproxtext{G}_0$ occurs. Spectroscopy in the contact regime, {it i. e.}, at currents in a $mutext{A}$ range was achieved. A modified line shape is observed indicating a significant change of the Kondo temperature $T_{text{K}}$ at contact. Model calculations indicate that the proximity of the tip shifts the cobalt $d$-band and thus affects $T_{text{K}}$.



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We use a low-temperature scanning tunneling microscope to study the interplay between the Kondo effect of a single-atom contact and a spin current. To this end, a nickel tip is coated by a thick layer of copper and brought into contact with a single Co atom adsorbed on a Cu(100) surface. We show that upon contact the Kondo resonance of Co is spin split and attribute the splitting to the spin current produced by the nickel tip and flowing across the copper spacer. A quantitative line shape analysis indicates that the spin polarization of the junction amounts up to 18%, but decreases when a pristine nickel tip is directly contacted to the Co atom.
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228 - Hee Seung Kim , Hyeok-Jun Yang , 2021
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