LAUSR.org creates dashboard-style pages of related content for over 1.5 million academic articles. Sign Up to like articles & get recommendations!

Microwave-assisted reversal of a single electron spin

Photo from wikipedia

The dynamics of a quantum system in a dissipative environment presents a rich and still largely unexplored phenomenology that is relevant for the control of quantum devices. The simplest problem… Click to show full abstract

The dynamics of a quantum system in a dissipative environment presents a rich and still largely unexplored phenomenology that is relevant for the control of quantum devices. The simplest problem can be modeled as a two-level system—such as a spin—in contact with a thermal bath. Here, we present experiments in which we monitor the spin reversal in a TbPc2 single-molecule spin transistor, and we show that the application of microwave pulses can cause the spin to flip between its two lowest-lying states ( | ↑ ⟩ and | ↓ ⟩) at a rate that increases with increasing duration and power of the pulses. This process is neither resonant nor coherent with the microwave pulses. Moreover, an asymmetry appears in the | ↓ ⟩→ | ↑ ⟩ and | ↑ ⟩→ | ↓ ⟩ transition probabilities, suggesting that the process occurs out of equilibrium. We explain the experimental results and provide an estimate of the local temperature increase induced by the microwave pulses by means of a model that takes into account the energy exchange between the single Tb3+ electron spin and the local environment.The dynamics of a quantum system in a dissipative environment presents a rich and still largely unexplored phenomenology that is relevant for the control of quantum devices. The simplest problem can be modeled as a two-level system—such as a spin—in contact with a thermal bath. Here, we present experiments in which we monitor the spin reversal in a TbPc2 single-molecule spin transistor, and we show that the application of microwave pulses can cause the spin to flip between its two lowest-lying states ( | ↑ ⟩ and | ↓ ⟩) at a rate that increases with increasing duration and power of the pulses. This process is neither resonant nor coherent with the microwave pulses. Moreover, an asymmetry appears in the | ↓ ⟩→ | ↑ ⟩ and | ↑ ⟩→ | ↓ ⟩ transition probabilities, suggesting that the process occurs out of equilibrium. We explain the experimental results and provide an estimate of the local temperature increase induced by the microwave pulses by means of a model that takes into account the energy exchange...

Keywords: microwave pulses; reversal; quantum; system; electron spin

Journal Title: Journal of Applied Physics
Year Published: 2019

Link to full text (if available)


Share on Social Media:                               Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!

Related content

More Information              News              Social Media              Video              Recommended



                Click one of the above tabs to view related content.