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Magnetoresistance from quantum interference effects in ferromagnets

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TLDR
It is argued that magnetoresistance can arise by a different mechanism in certain ferromagnets—quantum interference effects rather than simple scattering—and only weakly temperature-dependent below the Curie point.
Abstract
The desire to maximize the sensitivity of read/write heads (and thus the information density) of magnetic storage devices has stimulated interest in the discovery and design of new magnetic materials exhibiting magnetoresistance Recent discoveries include the 'colossal' magnetoresistance in the manganites and the enhanced magnetoresistance in low-carrier-density ferromagnets An important feature of these systems is that the electrons involved in electrical conduction are different from those responsible for the magnetism The latter are localized and act as scattering sites for the mobile electrons, and it is the field tuning of the scattering strength that ultimately gives rise to the observed magnetoresistance Here we argue that magnetoresistance can arise by a different mechanism in certain ferromagnets--quantum interference effects rather than simple scattering The ferromagnets in question are disordered, low-carrier-density magnets where the same electrons are responsible for both the magnetic properties and electrical conduction The resulting magnetoresistance is positive (that is, the resistance increases in response to an applied magnetic field) and only weakly temperature-dependent below the Curie point

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Citations
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Ferromagnetic materials

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors restrict their attention to the ferrites and a few other closely related materials, which are more closely related to anti-ferromagnetic substances than they are to ferromagnetics in which the magnetization results from the parallel alignment of all the magnetic moments present.
Journal ArticleDOI

Real-Space Observation of Helical Spin Order

TL;DR: The real space of the helical spin order proves to be much richer than that expected from the averaged structure; it exhibits a variety of magnetic defects similar to atomic dislocations in the crystal lattice.
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Large anomalous Hall effect in a silicon-based magnetic semiconductor

TL;DR: It is shown here that it is productive to consider transition metal monosilicides as potential alternatives for spintronics, and the discovery that the bulk metallic magnets derived from doping the narrow-gap insulator FeSi with Co share the very high anomalous Hall conductance of (GaMn)As, while displaying Curie temperatures as high as 53 K.
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Synthesis and applications of metal silicide nanowires

TL;DR: In this paper, transition metal silicides represent an extremely broad set of refractory materials that are currently employed for many applications including CMOS devices, thin film coatings, bulk structural components, electrical heating elements, photovoltaics, and thermoelectrics.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Disordered electronic systems

TL;DR: In this article, a review of the progress made in the last several years in understanding the properties of disordered electronic systems is presented, focusing on the metal-to-insulator transition and problems associated with the insulator.
Journal ArticleDOI

Thousandfold Change in Resistivity in Magnetoresistive La-Ca-Mn-O Films

TL;DR: A negative isotropic magnetoresistance effect has been observed in thin oxide films of perovskite-like La0.67Ca0.33MnOx, which could be useful for various magnetic and electric device applications if the observed effects of material processing are optimized.

Ferromagnetic materials

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors restrict their attention to the ferrites and a few other closely related materials, which are more closely related to anti-ferromagnetic substances than they are to ferromagnetics in which the magnetization results from the parallel alignment of all the magnetic moments present.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spin-Polarized Intergrain Tunneling in La 2/3 Sr 1/3 MnO 3

TL;DR: In this paper, the magnetoresistance and the field dependent magnetization have been systematically examined in the low temperature ferromagnetic metallic state of single crystal and polycrystalline.
Book

Spin Fluctuations in Itinerant Electron Magnetism

TL;DR: In this paper, a general theory of spin fluctuations and thermodynamical properties of itinerant electron magnets is developed, interpolating between the weakly and strongly ferromagnetic limits, and a unified expression is given for the Curie temperature and the physical meaning of the curie-Weiss magnetic susceptibility is discussed.
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