APS March Meeting 2013
Volume 58, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 18–22, 2013;
Baltimore, Maryland
Session W46: Focus Session: Advances in Scanned Probe Microscopy III: Novel Approaches and Ultrasensitive Detection
2:30 PM–5:42 PM,
Thursday, March 21, 2013
Hilton Baltimore
Room: Holiday Ballroom 5
Sponsoring
Unit:
GIMS
Chair: Eric Hudson, Pennsylvania State University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2013.MAR.W46.7
Abstract: W46.00007 : Spin dynamics of atoms and magnetic nanostructures on surfaces
3:42 PM–4:18 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Andreas Heinrich
(IBM Research)
Scanning tunneling microscopy is a powerful tool for studying the electronic
and magnetic properties of magnetic nanostructures on surfaces. Over the
last decade, inelastic tunneling spectroscopy has been used to probe
discrete energy levels of quantum spin systems. These states can often be
described as solutions of simple spin Hamiltonians. In spin excitation
spectroscopy, a spin system is kicked from the ground into excited spin
states at discrete energy increments.
In this talk we will focus on the dynamics of quantum spin systems on
surfaces. STM can measure tunnel currents in the range of pico amps with
millisecond time resolution. This time resolution is well matched to
observing transition between spin states of artificial magnetic
nanostructures on surfaces that can be built and measured with STM. We will
highlight an example of extended, artificial antiferromagnets on a Cu2N
surface (Science 2012). Smaller magnetic clusters relax much faster but
their dynamics can be measured with pump probe techniques. A pump voltage
pulse drives the spin system into excited states and a subsequent probe
pulse measures the resulting population of spin states. An exponential decay
back to the ground state is observed when averaging over many pump-probe
cycles (Science 2010). We will show results down to nanosecond time
resolution with an ultimate limit set by modern electronics at about 100
pico seconds.
Individual atoms on Cu2N relax their spin states even faster. Hence, another
technique is employed to determine spin relaxation times: small tunnel
currents always leave the spin system in the ground state while high
currents can create non-equilibrium distributions of spin states. This
approach relies on some modeling but allows time domain measurements down to
about 1 pico second (Nature Physics 2010). Transition metal atoms on metal
surfaces relax even faster, on time scales of about 100 femtoseconds. This
fast relaxation manifests itself as a measurable lifetime broadening of spin
excitation spectra.
Combining these approaches allows measurements of spin relaxation times over
about 16 orders of magnitude for spins on surfaces -- while maintaining the
atomic scale spatial resolution of STM!
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2013.MAR.W46.7