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Unusual features in the bias dependence of spin transport are observed in a Co/Au/NiFe spin valve fabricated on a highly textured Cu(100)/Si(100) Schottky interface, exploiting the local probing capabilities of a Ballistic electron magnetic microscope (BEMM). This arises due to local differences in the strain and the presence of misfit dislocations at the Schottky interface that enhances spin flip scattering and broadens the energy and angular distribution of the transmitted electrons. Cumulatively, these enable the transmitted hot electrons to probe the different conduction band minima in Si, giving rise to such bias dependent features in the magnetocurrent. This study reveals new insights into the spin dependence of transmission in an indirect band gap semiconductor as Si and highlights the unique capabilities of BEMM in probing local differences in spin transport across such textured interfaces.
We address the shot noise in the tunneling current through a localized spin, pertaining to recent experiments on magnetic adatoms and single molecular magnets. We show that both uncorrelated and spin-correlated scattering processes contribute vitally
In the spin energy excitation mode of normal metals and superconductors, spin up and down electrons (or quasiparticles) carry different heat currents. This mode occurs only when spin up and down energy distribution functions are non-identical, most s
We propose Landau levels as a probe for the topological character of electronic bands in two-dimensional moire superlattices. We consider two configurations of twisted double bilayer graphene (TDBG) that have very similar band structures, but show di
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In a multi-layer electronic system, stacking order provides a rarely-explored degree of freedom for tuning its electronic properties. Here we demonstrate the dramatically different transport properties in trilayer graphene (TLG) with different stacki