• Title/Summary/Keyword: spin-polarized current

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Giant Magnetoresistance in Low Dimensional Structures: Highlights and Applications of CIP- and CPP-GMR (저차원 나노구조체의 거대자기저항 현상에 대한 연구: CIP-와 CPP-구조에 대한 자기저항 현상의 주요 연구 및 응용)

  • Jang, Eun-Young;Kim, Tae-Hee
    • Journal of the Korean Magnetics Society
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    • v.17 no.5
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    • pp.210-214
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    • 2007
  • Recent years have seen a rapid development of spintronics. One of the major achievements of this field is the understanding of spin dependent process in various physical systems, for example, metallic multilayers showing the giant magnetoresistance (GMR). Today devices based on the GMR are revolutionizing electronic data storage. In this paper, we review recent developments in the research on GMR of low dimensional structures. We describe the magnetoresistance properties of magnetic multilayers, multilayered nanowires and nonopillars, etc.

Interface Engineering in Superconducting Ultra-thin Film of Ga (Ga 극초박막의 계면특성과 초전도 물성제어에 대한 연구)

  • Lee, Nyun-Jong;Kim, Tae-Hee
    • Journal of the Korean Magnetics Society
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    • v.20 no.6
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    • pp.212-215
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    • 2010
  • Spin polarized tunneling studies were carried out with Al-Ga bilayer as a spin detector, by Meservey-Tedrow technique. The superconductor (SC)/Insulator (I)/Ferromagnet (FM) tunnel junctions were provided by ultra high vacuum molecular beam epitaxy (UHV-MBE) technique. The analysis of interfacial properties in the Al-Ga bilayer was also carried out by Auger electron spectroscopy. It was observed that the superconducting transition temperature and energy gap were raised in comparison with that of bulk Ga and pure ultrathin Al films. Current studies clearly show how one can modify the material properties at the interface just with a few monolayers.

Beam line design and beam transport calculation for the μSR facility at RAON

  • Pak, Kihong;Park, Junesic;Jeong, Jae Young;Kim, Jae Chang;Kim, Kyungmin;Kim, Yong Hyun;Son, Jaebum;Lee, Ju Hahn;Lee, Wonjun;Kim, Yong Kyun
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.53 no.10
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    • pp.3344-3351
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    • 2021
  • The Rare Isotope Science Project was launched in 2011 in Korea toward constructing the Rare isotope Accelerator complex for ON line experiments (RAON). RAON will house several experimental systems, including the Muon Spin Rotation/Relaxation/Resonance (μSR) facility in High Energy Experimental Building B. This facility will use 600-MeV protons with a maximum current of 660 pμA and beam power of 400 kW. The key μSR features will facilitate projects related to condensed-matter and nuclear physics. Typical experiments require a few million surface muons fully spin-polarized opposite to their momentum for application to small samples. Here, we describe the design of a muon transport beam line for delivering the requisite muon numbers and the electromagnetic-component specifications in the μSR facility. We determine the beam-line configuration via beam-optics calculations and the transmission efficiency via single-particle tracking simulations. The electromagnet properties, including fringe field effects, are applied for each component in the calculations. The designed surface-muon beamline is 17.3 m long, consisting of 2 solenoids, 2 dipoles affording 70° deflection, 9 quadrupoles, and a Wien filter to eliminate contaminant positrons. The average incident-muon flux and spin rotation angle are estimated as 5.2 × 106 μ+/s and 45°, respectively.