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Showing papers on "Electric field published in 2012"


Book
30 Oct 2012
TL;DR: In this article, Rozhansky et al. studied the relationship between transverse conductivity and the generation of self-consistent electric fields in strongly ionized magnetized plasma.
Abstract: Mechanisms of transverse conductivity and generation of self-consistent electric fields in strongly ionized magnetized plasma V. Rozhansky. 1. Introduction.- 2. Conductivity tensor in partially ionized plasma.- 3. Main mechanisms of perpendicular conductivity in fully ionized plasma.- 4. Acceleration of plasma clouds in an inhomogeneous magnetic field.- 5. Alfven conductivity.- 6. Perpendicular viscosity, radial current, and radial electric field in an infinite cylinder.- 7. Current systems in front of a biased electrode (flush-mounted probe) and spot of emission.- 8. Currents in the vicinity of a biased electrode that is smaller than the ion gyroradius.- 9. Neoclassical perpendicular conductivity in a tokamak.- 10. Transverse conductivity in a reversed field pinch.- 11. Modeling of electric field and currents in the tokamak edge plasma.- 12. Mechanisms of anomalous perpendicular viscosity and viscosity-driven currents.- 13. Transverse conductivity in a stochastic magnetic field.- 14. Electric fields generated in the shielding layer between hot plasma and a solid state.-- Correlations and anomalous transport models O.G. Bakunin. 1. Introduction.- 2. Turbulent diffusion and transport.- 3. Non-local effects and diffusion equations.- 4. The Corrsin conjecture.- 5. Effects of seed diffusivity.- 6. The diffusive tracer equation and averaging.- 7. The quasi-linear approximation.- 8. The diffusive renormalization.- 9. Anomalous transport and convective cells.- 10. Stochastic instability and transport.- 11. Fractal conceptions and turbulence.- 12. Percolation and scalings.- 13. Percolation and turbulent transport scalings.- 14. The temporal hierarchy of scales and correlations.- 15. The stochastic magnetic field and percolation transport.- 16. Percolation in drift flows.- 17. Multiscale flows.- 18. Subdiffusion and traps.- 19. Continuous time random walks.- 20. Fractional differential equations and scalings.- 21. Correlation and phase-space.- 22. Conclusion.

3,684 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
13 Apr 2012-Science
TL;DR: It is found that the skyrmion can magnetically induce electric polarization in an insulating chiral-lattice magnet Cu2OSeO3 through Lorentz transmission electron microscopy and magnetic susceptibility measurements.
Abstract: A magnetic skyrmion is a topologically stable particle-like object that appears as a vortex-like spin texture at the nanometer scale in a chiral-lattice magnet. Skyrmions have been observed in metallic materials, where they are controllable by electric currents. Here, we report the experimental discovery of magnetoelectric skyrmions in an insulating chiral-lattice magnet Cu(2)OSeO(3) through Lorentz transmission electron microscopy and magnetic susceptibility measurements. We find that the skyrmion can magnetically induce electric polarization. The observed magnetoelectric coupling may potentially enable the manipulation of the skyrmion by an external electric field without losses due to joule heating.

1,146 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the electronic structure of silicene and the stability of its weakly buckled honeycomb lattice in an external electric field oriented perpendicular to the monolayer of Si atoms were analyzed.
Abstract: We report calculations of the electronic structure of silicene and the stability of its weakly buckled honeycomb lattice in an external electric field oriented perpendicular to the monolayer of Si atoms. The electric field produces a tunable band gap in the Dirac-type electronic spectrum, the gap being suppressed by a factor of about eight by the high polarizability of the system. At low electric fields, the interplay between this tunable band gap, which is specific to electrons on a honeycomb lattice, and the Kane-Mele spin-orbit coupling induces a transition from a topological to a band insulator, whereas at much higher electric fields silicene becomes a semimetal.

969 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A coherent precessional magnetization switching using electric field pulses in nanoscale magnetic cells with a few atomic FeCo (001) epitaxial layers adjacent to a MgO barrier is demonstrated and the realization of bistable toggle switching using the coherentPrecessions is demonstrated.
Abstract: The magnetization direction of a metallic magnet has generally been controlled by a magnetic field or by spin-current injection into nanosized magnetic cells. Both these methods use an electric current to control the magnetization direction; therefore, they are energy consuming. Magnetization control using an electric field is considered desirable because of its expected ultra-low power consumption and coherent behaviour. Previous experimental approaches towards achieving voltage control of magnetization switching have used single ferromagnetic layers with and without piezoelectric materials, ferromagnetic semiconductors, multiferroic materials, and their hybrid systems. However, the coherent control of magnetization using voltage signals has not thus far been realized. Also, bistable magnetization switching (which is essential in information storage) possesses intrinsic difficulties because an electric field does not break time-reversal symmetry. Here, we demonstrate a coherent precessional magnetization switching using electric field pulses in nanoscale magnetic cells with a few atomic FeCo (001) epitaxial layers adjacent to a MgO barrier. Furthermore, we demonstrate the realization of bistable toggle switching using the coherent precessions. The estimated power consumption for single switching in the ideal equivalent switching circuit can be of the order of 10(4)k(B)T, suggesting a reduction factor of 1/500 when compared with that of the spin-current-injection switching process.

725 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
26 Jul 2012-Nature
TL;DR: This work prepared metal–insulator–semiconductor field-effect transistors based on vanadium dioxide and found that electrostatic charging at a surface drives all the previously localized charge carriers in the bulk material into motion, leading to the emergence of a three-dimensional metallic ground state.
Abstract: In the classic transistor, the number of electric charge carriers--and thus the electrical conductivity--is precisely controlled by external voltage, providing electrical switching capability. This simple but powerful feature is essential for information processing technology, and also provides a platform for fundamental physics research. As the number of charges essentially determines the electronic phase of a condensed-matter system, transistor operation enables reversible and isothermal changes in the system's state, as successfully demonstrated in electric-field-induced ferromagnetism and superconductivity. However, this effect of the electric field is limited to a channel thickness of nanometres or less, owing to the presence of Thomas-Fermi screening. Here we show that this conventional picture does not apply to a class of materials characterized by inherent collective interactions between electrons and the crystal lattice. We prepared metal-insulator-semiconductor field-effect transistors based on vanadium dioxide--a strongly correlated material with a thermally driven, first-order metal-insulator transition well above room temperature--and found that electrostatic charging at a surface drives all the previously localized charge carriers in the bulk material into motion, leading to the emergence of a three-dimensional metallic ground state. This non-local switching of the electronic state is achieved by applying a voltage of only about one volt. In a voltage-sweep measurement, the first-order nature of the metal-insulator transition provides a non-volatile memory effect, which is operable at room temperature. Our results demonstrate a conceptually new field-effect device, extending the concept of electric-field control to macroscopic phase control.

668 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compute the electromagnetic fields generated in heavy-ion collisions by using the HIJING model and find very strong electric and magnetic fields both parallel and perpendicular to the reaction plane on the event-by-event basis.
Abstract: We compute the electromagnetic fields generated in heavy-ion collisions by using the HIJING model. Although after averaging over many events only the magnetic field perpendicular to the reaction plane is sizable, we find very strong electric and magnetic fields both parallel and perpendicular to the reaction plane on the event-by-event basis. We study the time evolution and the spatial distribution of these fields. Especially, the electromagnetic response of the quark-gluon plasma can give non-trivial evolution of the electromagnetic fields. The implications of the strong electromagnetic fields on the hadronic observables are also discussed.

602 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Numerically and experimentally a novel mechanism of deterministic magnetization reversal in a ferrimagnet driven by an ultrafast heating of the medium resulting from the absorption of a sub-picosecond laser pulse without the presence of a magnetic field is shown.
Abstract: The question of how, and how fast, magnetization can be reversed is a topic of great practical interest for the manipulation and storage of magnetic information. It is generally accepted that magnetization reversal should be driven by a stimulus represented by time-non-invariant vectors such as a magnetic field, spin-polarized electric current, or cross-product of two oscillating electric fields. However, until now it has been generally assumed that heating alone, not represented as a vector at all, cannot result in a deterministic reversal of magnetization, although it may assist this process. Here we show numerically and demonstrate experimentally a novel mechanism of deterministic magnetization reversal in a ferrimagnet driven by an ultrafast heating of the medium resulting from the absorption of a sub-picosecond laser pulse without the presence of a magnetic field.

600 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the band structure of a two-dimensional honeycomb lattice of silicon atoms is investigated and the authors show that the gap closes at a certain critical electric field, and that it is possible to generate helical zero modes anywhere in a silicene sheet by adjusting the electric field.
Abstract: Silicene is a monolayer of silicon atoms forming a two-dimensional honeycomb lattice, which shares almost every remarkable property with graphene. The low energy structure of silicene is described by Dirac electrons with relatively large spin-orbit interactions due to its buckled structure. The key observation is that the band structure is controllable by applying the electric field to a silicene sheet. In particular, the gap closes at a certain critical electric field. Examining the band structure of a silicene nanoribbon, we demonstrate that a topological phase transition occurs from a topological insulator to a band insulator with the increase of the electric field. We also show that it is possible to generate helical zero modes anywhere in a silicene sheet by adjusting the electric field locally to this critical value. The region may act as a quantum wire or a quantum dot surrounded by topological and/or band insulators. We explicitly construct the wave functions for some simple geometries based on the low-energy effective Dirac theory. These results are applicable also to germanene, that is a two-dimensional honeycomb structure of germanium.

593 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the wave functions for simple geometries based on the low-energy effective Dirac theory were constructed for a silicene nanoribbon and showed that a topological phase transition occurs from a topologically topological insulator to a band insulator with an increase of electric field.
Abstract: Silicene is a monolayer of silicon atoms forming a two-dimensional (2D) honeycomb lattice and shares almost all the remarkable properties of graphene. The low-energy structure of silicene is described by Dirac electrons with relatively large spin–orbit interactions owing to its buckled structure. A key observation is that the band structure can be controlled by applying an electric field to a silicene sheet. In particular, the gap closes at a certain critical electric field. Examining the band structure of a silicene nanoribbon, we show that a topological phase transition occurs from a topological insulator to a band insulator with an increase of electric field. We also show that it is possible to generate helical zero modes anywhere in a silicene sheet by adjusting the electric field locally to this critical value. The region may act as a quantum wire or a quantum dot surrounded by topological and/or band insulators. We explicitly construct the wave functions for some simple geometries based on the low-energy effective Dirac theory. These results are also applicable to germanene, which is a 2D honeycomb structure of germanium.

573 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors review the recent developments in the electric field control of magnetism in multiferroic heterostructures, which consist of heterogeneous materials systems where a magnetoelectric coupling is engineered between magnetic and ferroelectric components.
Abstract: We review the recent developments in the electric field control of magnetism in multiferroic heterostructures, which consist of heterogeneous materials systems where a magnetoelectric coupling is engineered between magnetic and ferroelectric components. The magnetoelectric coupling in these composite systems is interfacial in origin, and can arise from elastic strain, charge, and exchange bias interactions, with different characteristic responses and functionalities. Moreover, charge transport phenomena in multiferroic heterostructures, where both magnetic and ferroelectric order parameters are used to control charge transport, suggest new possibilities to control the conduction paths of the electron spin, with potential for device applications.

438 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
23 Aug 2012-Nature
TL;DR: Supramolecular charge-transfer networks that undergo ferro electric polarization switching with a ferroelectric Curie temperature above room temperature are described and could help guide the development of other functional organic systems that can switch polarization under the influence of electric fields at ambient temperatures.
Abstract: Materials exhibiting a spontaneous electrical polarization that can be switched easily between antiparallel orientations are of potential value for sensors, photonics and energy-efficient memories. In this context, organic ferroelectrics are of particular interest because they promise to be lightweight, inexpensive and easily processed into devices. A recently identified family of organic ferroelectric structures is based on intermolecular charge transfer, where donor and acceptor molecules co-crystallize in an alternating fashion known as a mixed stack: in the crystalline lattice, a collective transfer of electrons from donor to acceptor molecules results in the formation of dipoles that can be realigned by an external field as molecules switch partners in the mixed stack. Although mixed stacks have been investigated extensively, only three systems are known to show ferroelectric switching, all below 71 kelvin. Here we describe supramolecular charge-transfer networks that undergo ferroelectric polarization switching with a ferroelectric Curie temperature above room temperature. These polar and switchable systems utilize a structural synergy between a hydrogen-bonded network and charge-transfer complexation of donor and acceptor molecules in a mixed stack. This supramolecular motif could help guide the development of other functional organic systems that can switch polarization under the influence of electric fields at ambient temperatures.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that fluctuating proton positions in the colliding nuclei generate very strong magnetic and electric fields in the direction both parallel and perpendicular to the reaction plane.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the nature of small-scale turbulent fluctuations in the solar wind is investigated using a comparison of Cluster magnetic and electric field measurements to predictions arising from models consisting of either kinetic Alfven waves or whistler waves.
Abstract: The nature of small-scale turbulent fluctuations in the solar wind is investigated using a comparison of Cluster magnetic and electric field measurements to predictions arising from models consisting of either kinetic Alfven waves or whistler waves. The electric and magnetic field properties of these waves from linear theory are used to construct spacecraft-frame frequency spectra of (|δE|/|δB|) s/c and (|δB ∥|/|δB|) s/c , allowing for a direct comparison to spacecraft data. The measured properties of the small-scale turbulent fluctuations, found to be inconsistent with the whistler wave model, agree well with the prediction of a spectrum of kinetic Alfven waves with nearly perpendicular wavevectors.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the formation and observed properties of noncovalent complexes can be fully explained in terms of electrostatics/polarization plus dispersion as the driving forces; this straightforward interpretation is based largely upon physical observables, including electrostatic potentials, geometries, interaction energies and electric fields.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It was demonstrated that a detailed understanding of the influence of the external field on the energy level structure of the molecules was required for the manipulation of molecules with electric or magnetic fields.
Abstract: A study was conducted to demonstrate the manipulation of molecular beams with electric and magnetic fields. Seeded pulsed supersonic expansions were employed to conduct the investigations. The conservative forces exerted further downstream by the electric and magnetic fields enabled the researchers to manipulate and control the shape and the position of the distribution in the six-dimensional phase-space. All of the original experimental geometries were devised to create strong magnetic or electric field gradients to efficiently deflect particles from the beam axis. It was demonstrated that a detailed understanding of the influence of the external field on the energy level structure of the molecules was required for the manipulation of molecules with electric or magnetic fields.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of vertical electric field on the electronic structure of bilayer MoS2 bilayer was systematically examined by means of density functional theory computations, and it was shown that the bandgaps of the bilayer bilayer monotonically decrease with an increasing voltage.
Abstract: Interest in the two-dimensional MoS2 material is consistently increasing because of its many potential applications, in particular in the next-generation nanoelectronic devices. By means of density functional theory computations, we systematically examined the effect of vertical electric field on the electronic structure of MoS2 bilayer. The bandgaps of the bilayer MoS2 monotonically decrease with an increasing vertical electric field. The critical electric fields, at which the semiconductor-to-metal transition occurs, are predicted to be in the range of 1.0–1.5 V/A depending on different stacked conformations. Ab initio quantum transport simulations of a dual-gated bilayer MoS2 channel clearly confirm that the vertical electric field continuously manipulates the transmission gap of bilayer MoS2.

Journal ArticleDOI
22 Jun 2012-Science
TL;DR: Spectroscopic studies reveal that the induced strain led to charge-carrier localization into spatially confined quantum dots, an effect consistent with the formation of strain-induced pseudomagnetic fields.
Abstract: We determined the electromechanical properties of a suspended graphene layer by scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS) measurements, as well as computational simulations of the graphene-membrane mechanics and morphology. A graphene membrane was continuously deformed by controlling the competing interactions with a STM probe tip and the electric field from a back-gate electrode. The probe tip-induced deformation created a localized strain field in the graphene lattice. STS measurements on the deformed suspended graphene display an electronic spectrum completely different from that of graphene supported by a substrate. The spectrum indicates the formation of a spatially confined quantum dot, in agreement with recent predictions of confinement by strain-induced pseudomagnetic fields.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors predict that 5D transition metals on graphene present a unique class of hybrid systems exhibiting topological transport effects that can be manipulated effectively by external electric fields.
Abstract: Based on first-principles calculations, we predict that 5d transition metals on graphene present a unique class of hybrid systems exhibiting topological transport effects that can be manipulated effectively by external electric fields. The origin of this phenomenon lies in the exceptional magnetic properties and the large spin-orbit interaction of the 5d metals leading to significant magnetic moments accompanied with colossal magnetocrystalline anisotropy energies. A strong magnetoelectric response is predicted that offers the possibility to switch the spontaneous magnetization direction by moderate electric fields, enabling an electrically tunable quantum anomalous Hall effect.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Transport measurements in ultraclean double-gated bilayer graphene are reported and source-drain bias is used as a spectroscopic tool to resolve a gap of ∼2 meV at the charge neutrality point, which represents the firstSpectroscopic mapping of the ground states in bilayers graphene in the presence of both electric and magnetic fields.
Abstract: Charge-neutral bilayer graphene has an energy gap of 2 meV that can be reduced by an electric field and increased by a magnetic field.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a demonstration of the ability to control Ferromagnetic resonance excitations with electric fields alone could drastically reduce the power consumption of spintronic devices and systems, which could be used to reduce power consumption.
Abstract: Ferromagnetic resonance excitations offer a means to coherently manipulate the spin dynamics of spintronic devices and systems. A demonstration of the ability to control these excitations with electric fields alone could drastically reduce the power consumption of these devices.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a family of resistive solutions that smoothly bridge the gap between the vacuum and the force-free magnetosphere solutions was proposed to explain the morphology and spectra of high-energy emission from pulsars.
Abstract: The current state of the art in the modeling of pulsar magnetospheres invokes either the vacuum or force-free limits for the magnetospheric plasma. Neither of these limits can simultaneously account for both the plasma currents and the accelerating electric fields that are needed to explain the morphology and spectra of high-energy emission from pulsars. To better understand the structure of such magnetospheres, we combine accelerating fields and force-free solutions by considering models of magnetospheres filled with resistive plasma. We formulate Ohm's law in the minimal velocity fluid frame and construct a family of resistive solutions that smoothly bridges the gap between the vacuum and the force-free magnetosphere solutions. The spin-down luminosity, open field line potential drop, and the fraction of open field lines all transition between the vacuum and force-free values as the plasma conductivity varies from zero to infinity. For fixed inclination angle, we find that the spin-down luminosity depends linearly on the open field line potential drop. We consider the implications of our resistive solutions for the spin-down of intermittent pulsars and sub-pulse drift phenomena in radio pulsars.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown by first-principles calculations that the magnetic and electronic properties of zigzag MoS2NRs exhibit sensitive response to applied strain and electric field, suggesting a robust and efficient approach to modulating the properties of MoS 2NRs by a combination of strain engineering andElectric field tuning.
Abstract: Effective modulation of physical properties via external control may open various potential nanoelectronic applications of single-layer MoS2 nanoribbons (MoS2NRs). We show by first-principles calculations that the magnetic and electronic properties of zigzag MoS2NRs exhibit sensitive response to applied strain and electric field. Tensile strain in the zigzag direction produces reversible modulation of magnetic moments and electronic phase transitions among metallic, half-metallic, and semiconducting states, which stem from the energy-level shifts induced by an internal electric polarization and the competing covalent/ionic interactions. A simultaneously applied electric field further enhances or suppresses the strain-induced modulations depending on the direction of the electric field relative to the internal polarization. These findings suggest a robust and efficient approach to modulating the properties of MoS2NRs by a combination of strain engineering and electric field tuning.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a relativistic feedback discharge model was proposed to calculate the electric fields self-consistently from the charge motion of the drifting low-energy electrons and ions, produced from the ionization of air by the runaway electrons, including two and three-body attachment and recombination.
Abstract: [1] As thunderclouds charge, the large-scale fields may approach the relativistic feedback threshold, above which the production of relativistic runaway electron avalanches becomes self-sustaining through the generation of backward propagating runaway positrons and backscattered X-rays. Positive intracloud (IC) lightning may force the large-scale electric fields inside thunderclouds above the relativistic feedback threshold, causing the number of runaway electrons, and the resulting X-ray and gamma ray emission, to grow exponentially, producing very large fluxes of energetic radiation. As the flux of runaway electrons increases, ionization eventually causes the electric field to discharge, bringing the field below the relativistic feedback threshold again and reducing the flux of runaway electrons. These processes are investigated with a new model that includes the production, propagation, diffusion, and avalanche multiplication of runaway electrons; the production and propagation of X-rays and gamma rays; and the production, propagation, and annihilation of runaway positrons. In this model, referred to as the relativistic feedback discharge model, the large-scale electric fields are calculated self-consistently from the charge motion of the drifting low-energy electrons and ions, produced from the ionization of air by the runaway electrons, including two- and three-body attachment and recombination. Simulation results show that when relativistic feedback is considered, bright gamma ray flashes are a natural consequence of upward +IC lightning propagating in large-scale thundercloud fields. Furthermore, these flashes have the same time structures, including both single and multiple pulses, intensities, angular distributions, current moments, and energy spectra as terrestrial gamma ray flashes, and produce large current moments that should be observable in radio waves.

Journal Article
TL;DR: In this paper, the magnetic and electronic properties of single-layer MoS 2 nanoribbons (MoS 2 NRs) are modulated by applied strain and electric field.
Abstract: Effective modulation of physical properties via external control may open various potential nanoelectronic applications of single-layer MoS 2 nanoribbons (MoS 2 NRs). We show by first-principles calculations that the magnetic and electronic properties of zigzag MoS 2 NRs exhibit sensitive response to applied strain and electric field. Tensile strain in the zigzag direction produces reversible modulation of magnetic moments and electronic phase transitions among metallic, half-metallic, and semiconducting states, which stem from the energy-level shifts induced by an internal electric polarization and the competing covalent/ionic interactions. A simultaneously applied electric field further enhances or suppresses the strain-induced modulations depending on the direction of the electric field relative to the internal polarization. These findings suggest a robust and efficient approach to modulating the properties of Mo 2 NRs by a combination of strain engineering and electric field tuning.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A comparison to the plasmon antennas reveals remarkable symmetries between electric and magnetic systems, which might lead to novel paradigms in the design of nanophotonic devices that involve magnetic activity.
Abstract: Plasmonic nanoparticles are commonly used to tune and direct the radiation from electric dipolar emitters. Less progress has been made towards understanding complementary systems of magnetic nature. However, it has been recently shown that high-index dielectric spheres can act as effective magnetic antennas. Here we explore the concept of coupling dielectric magnetic antennas with either an electric or magnetic dipolar emitter in a similar fashion to the purely electric systems reported previously. We investigate the enhancement of radiation from systems comprising admixtures of these electric and magnetic elements and perform a full study of its dependence on the distance and polarization of the emitter with respect to the antenna. A comparison to the plasmon antennas reveals remarkable symmetries between electric and magnetic systems, which might lead to novel paradigms in the design of nanophotonic devices that involve magnetic activity.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that an applied voltage perpendicular to a Co or CoB wire can significantly increase or decrease domain wall velocities, providing a first step towards electrical control of domain wall devices.
Abstract: Domain wall motion in materials exhibiting perpendicular magnetic anisotropy has been the subject of intensive research because of its large potential for future spintronic devices. Recently, it has been shown that perpendicular anisotropy of thin films can be influenced by electric fields. Voltage-controlled magnetic switching has already been realized, which is envisioned to lead to low-power logic and memory devices. Here we demonstrate a radically new application of this effect, namely control of domain wall motion by electric fields. We show that an applied voltage perpendicular to a Co or CoB wire can significantly increase or decrease domain wall velocities. Velocity modification over an order of magnitude is demonstrated (from 0.4 to 4 μm s−1), providing a first step towards electrical control of domain wall devices. This opens up possibilities of real-time and local control of domain wall motion by electric fields at extremely low power cost. The motion of domain walls in magnetic materials characterized by a perpendicular axis of magnetization is a promising means of controlling information in future memory and logic devices. Schellekenset al. show the velocity of domain walls in such systems can be controlled by using an applied electric field.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the incorporation of Gd into HfO2 thin films is shown to induce ferroelectricity, and a significant influence of electric field cycling on both polarization and small-signal capacitancevoltage measurements can be observed.
Abstract: The incorporation of Gd into HfO2 thin films is shown to induce ferroelectricity. A significant influence of electric field cycling on both polarization as well as small-signal capacitance-voltage measurements can be observed. X-ray diffraction measurements are supported by infrared absorption analysis and give further evidence of the previously proposed non-centrosymmetric transition phase of space group Pbc21.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, an electric double-layer transistor with an ionic liquid was constructed for a layered transition metal disulphide (MoS2) and a metallic behavior was observed in the MoS2 channel.
Abstract: Electro-static carrier doping was attempted in a layered transition metal disulphide MoS2 by constructing an electric double-layer transistor with an ionic liquid. With the application of gate voltage VG higher than 3 V, a metallic behavior was observed in the MoS2 channel. We found an onset of electric field-induced superconductivity in the field induced metallic phase. A maximum TC ∼ 9.4 K was observed, which could be higher than those in chemically doped bulk materials.

Journal ArticleDOI
07 May 2012-ACS Nano
TL;DR: It is shown that, by applying an external transverse electric field, E(ext), the nanoribbon band gap can be significantly reduced, leading to a metal-insulator transition beyond a certain critical value.
Abstract: Ab initio density functional theory calculations are performed to investigate the electronic structure of MoS2 armchair nanoribbons in the presence of an external static electric field Such nanori

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors report indium incorporation properties on various nonpolar and semipolar free-standing GaN substrates, and show that both indium composition and polarization-related electric fields impact the emission wavelength of the quantum wells (QWs).
Abstract: We report indium incorporation properties on various nonpolar and semipolar free-standing GaN substrates. Electroluminescence characterization and x-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis indicate that the semipolar (202¯1¯) and (112¯2) planes have the highest indium incorporation rate among the studied planes. We also show that both indium composition and polarization-related electric fields impact the emission wavelength of the quantum wells (QWs). The different magnitudes and directions of the polarization-related electric fields for each orientation result in different potential profiles for the various semipolar and nonpolar QWs, leading to different emission wavelengths at a given indium composition.