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Dive into the research topics where Alan J. Drew is active.

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Featured researches published by Alan J. Drew.


Nature Materials | 2009

Coexistence of static magnetism and superconductivity in SmFeAsO 1− x F x as revealed by muon spin rotation

Alan J. Drew; Ch. Niedermayer; P. J. Baker; Francis L. Pratt; Stephen J. Blundell; Tom Lancaster; R. H. Liu; Gang Wu; Xianhui Chen; I. Watanabe; Vivek Kumar Malik; Adam Dubroka; Matthias Rössle; Kyung Wan Kim; C. Baines; C. Bernhard

The recent observation of superconductivity with critical temperatures (Tc) up to 55 K in the pnictide RFeAsO(1-x)F(x), where R is a lanthanide, marks the first discovery of a non-copper-oxide-based layered high-Tc superconductor. It has raised the suspicion that these new materials share a similar pairing mechanism to the cuprate superconductors, as both families exhibit superconductivity following charge doping of a magnetic parent material. In this context, it is important to follow the evolution of the microscopic magnetic properties of the pnictides with doping and hence to determine whether magnetic correlations coexist with superconductivity. Here, we present a muon spin rotation study on SmFeAsO(1-x)F(x), with x=0-0.30 that shows that, as in the cuprates, static magnetism persists well into the superconducting regime. This analogy is quite surprising as the parent compounds of the two families have rather different magnetic ground states: itinerant spin density wave for the pnictides contrasted with the Mott-Hubbard insulator in the cuprates. Our findings therefore suggest that the proximity to magnetic order and associated soft magnetic fluctuations, rather than strong electronic correlations in the vicinity of a Mott-Hubbard transition, may be the key ingredients of high-Tc superconductors.


Nature Materials | 2011

Engineering spin propagation across a hybrid organic/inorganic interface using a polar layer

Leander Schulz; Laura Nuccio; M. Willis; P. Desai; P. Shakya; T. Kreouzis; Vivek Kumar Malik; C. Bernhard; Francis L. Pratt; N. A. Morley; A. Suter; G. J. Nieuwenhuys; T. Prokscha; E. Morenzoni; W. P. Gillin; Alan J. Drew

Spintronics has shown a remarkable and rapid development, for example from the initial discovery of giant magnetoresistance in spin valves to their ubiquity in hard-disk read heads in a relatively short time. However, the ability to fully harness electron spin as another degree of freedom in semiconductor devices has been slower to take off. One future avenue that may expand the spintronic technology base is to take advantage of the flexibility intrinsic to organic semiconductors (OSCs), where it is possible to engineer and control their electronic properties and tailor them to obtain new device concepts. Here we show that we can control the spin polarization of extracted charge carriers from an OSC by the inclusion of a thin interfacial layer of polar material. The electric dipole moment brought about by this layer shifts the OSC highest occupied molecular orbital with respect to the Fermi energy of the ferromagnetic contact. This approach allows us full control of the spin band appropriate for charge-carrier extraction, opening up new spintronic device concepts for future exploitation.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Electronic Phase Separation in the Slightly Underdoped Iron Pnictide Superconductor Ba1-xKxFe2As2

J. T. Park; D. S. Inosov; Ch. Niedermayer; G. L. Sun; D. Haug; N. B. Christensen; Robert E. Dinnebier; A. V. Boris; Alan J. Drew; Leander Schulz; T. Shapoval; U. Wolff; V. Neu; Xiaoping Yang; C. T. Lin; B. Keimer; V. Hinkov

Here we present a combined study of the slightly underdoped novel pnictide superconductor Ba1-xKxFe2As2 by means of x-ray powder diffraction, neutron scattering, muon-spin rotation (microSR), and magnetic force microscopy (MFM). Static antiferromagnetic order sets in below T{m} approximately 70 K as inferred from the neutron scattering and zero-field-microSR data. Transverse-field microSR below Tc shows a coexistence of magnetically ordered and nonmagnetic states, which is also confirmed by MFM imaging. We explain such coexistence by electronic phase separation into antiferromagnetic and superconducting- or normal-state regions on a lateral scale of several tens of nanometers. Our findings indicate that such mesoscopic phase separation can be considered an intrinsic property of some iron pnictide superconductors.


Nature Materials | 2009

Giant superconductivity-induced modulation of the ferromagnetic magnetization in a cuprate–manganite superlattice

J. Hoppler; J. Stahn; Ch. Niedermayer; Vivek Kumar Malik; Houssny Bouyanfif; Alan J. Drew; Matthias Rössle; Alexandre I. Buzdin; G. Cristiani; H.-U. Habermeier; B. Keimer; C. Bernhard

Artificial multilayers offer unique opportunities for combining materials with antagonistic orders such as superconductivity and ferromagnetism and thus to realize novel quantum states. In particular, oxide multilayers enable the utilization of the high superconducting transition temperature of the cuprates and the versatile magnetic properties of the colossal-magnetoresistance manganites. However, apart from exploratory work, the in-depth investigation of their unusual properties has only just begun. Here we present neutron reflectometry measurements of a [Y(0.6)Pr(0.4)Ba(2)Cu(3)O(7) (10 nm)/La(2/3)Ca(1/3)MnO(3) (10 nm)](10) superlattice, which reveal a surprisingly large superconductivity-induced modulation of the vertical ferromagnetic magnetization profile. Most surprisingly, this modulation seems to involve the density rather than the orientation of the magnetization and is highly susceptible to the strain, which is transmitted from the SrTiO(3) substrate. We outline a possible explanation of this unusual superconductivity-induced phenomenon in terms of a phase separation between ferromagnetic and non-ferromagnetic nanodomains in the La(2/3)Ca(1/3)MnO(3) layers.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Coexistence of magnetic fluctuations and superconductivity in the pnictide high temperature superconductor SmFeAsO1-xFx measured by muon spin rotation.

Alan J. Drew; Francis L. Pratt; Tom Lancaster; Stephen J. Blundell; P. J. Baker; R. H. Liu; G. Wu; Xianhui Chen; I. Watanabe; Vivek Kumar Malik; Adam Dubroka; Kyung Wan Kim; Matthias Rössle; C. Bernhard

Muon spin rotation experiments were performed on the pnictide high temperature superconductor SmFeAsO1-xFx with x=0.18 and 0.3. We observed an unusual enhancement of slow spin fluctuations in the vicinity of the superconducting transition which suggests that the spin fluctuations contribute to the formation of an unconventional superconducting state. An estimate of the in-plane penetration depth lambda ab(0)=190(5) nm was obtained, which confirms that the pnictide superconductors obey an Uemura-style relationship between Tc and lambda ab(0);(-2).


Advanced Materials | 2013

A Single-Device Universal Logic Gate Based on a Magnetically Enhanced Memristor

Mirko Prezioso; Alberto Riminucci; Patrizio Graziosi; Ilaria Bergenti; Rajib Rakshit; Raimondo Cecchini; Anna Vianelli; F. Borgatti; Norman Haag; M. Willis; Alan J. Drew; W. P. Gillin; V. Dediu

Memristors are one of the most promising candidates for future information and communications technology (ICT) architectures. Two experimental proofs of concept are presented based on the intermixing of spintronic and memristive effects into a single device, a magnetically enhanced memristor (MEM). By exploiting the interaction between the memristance and the giant magnetoresistance (GMR), a universal implication (IMP) logic gate based on a single MEM device is realized.


Physical Review Letters | 2002

Direct Evidence for an Intrinsic Square Vortex Lattice in the Overdoped High- Tc Superconductor La1.83Sr0.17CuO4+δ

R. Gilardi; J. Mesot; Alan J. Drew; U. Divakar; S. L. Lee; E. M. Forgan; O. Zaharko; K. Conder; V. K. Aswal; C. D. Dewhurst; R. Cubitt; N. Momono; M. Oda

We report here the first direct observations of a well ordered vortex lattice in the bulk of a La(2-x)Sr(x)CuO(4+delta) single crystal (slightly overdoped, x = 0.17). Our small angle neutron scattering investigation of the mixed phase reveals a crossover from triangular to square coordination with increasing magnetic field. The existence of an intrinsic square vortex lattice has never been observed in high-temperature superconductors and is indicative of the coupling of the vortex lattice to a source of anisotropy, such as those provided by a d-wave order parameter or the presence of stripes.


Physical Review B | 2009

Elucidating the role of hyperfine interactions on organic magnetoresistance using deuterated aluminium tris(8-hydroxyquinoline)

N. J. Rolfe; Martin Heeney; Peter B. Wyatt; Alan J. Drew; T. Kreouzis; W. P. Gillin

Measurements of the effect of a magnetic field on the light output and current through an organic light-emitting diode made with deuterated aluminum tris(8-hydroxyquinoline) have shown that hyperfine coupling with protons is not the cause of the intrinsic organic magnetoresistance. We suggest that interactions with unpaired electrons in the device may be responsible.


Journal of Physics D | 2014

Muon spin spectroscopy: magnetism, soft matter and the bridge between the two

Laura Nuccio; Leander Schulz; Alan J. Drew

LS would like to acknowledge financial support from the Swiss National Science Foundation, grant numbers PBFRP2-138632 and PBFRP2-142820. AD would like to acknowledge financial support from the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, grant number EP/G054568/1, the European Union Seventh Framework Programme project NMP3-SL- 2011-263104 ‘HINTS’ and the European Research Council project ‘Muon Spin Spectroscopy of Excited States (MuSES)’ proposal number 307593


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Superconducting Energy Gap and c-Axis Plasma Frequency of (Nd, Sm)FeAsO0.82F0.18 Superconductors from Infrared Ellipsometry

Adam Dubroka; Kyung Wan Kim; Matthias Rössle; Vivek Kumar Malik; Alan J. Drew; R. H. Liu; G. Wu; Xianhui Chen; C. Bernhard

We present far-infrared ellipsometric measurements of polycrystalline samples of the pnictide superconductor RFeAsO0.82F0.18 (R=Nd and Sm). We find evidence that the electronic properties are strongly anisotropic such that the optical spectra are dominated by the weakly conducting c-axis response similar to the cuprate high-temperature superconductors. We deduce an upper limit of the c-axis superconducting plasma frequency of omega pl,c(SC)< or =260 cm(-1) corresponding to a lower limit of the c-axis magnetic penetration depth of lambda c > or =6 microm and lambda c/lambda ab > or =30 as compared to lambda ab=185 nm from muon spin rotation [A. Drew, arXiv:0805.1042 [Phys. Rev. Lett. (to be published)]]. We also observe a gaplike suppression of the conductivity in the superconducting state with a shoulderlike feature at omegaSC* approximately 300 cm(-1) and spectral shape which is consistent with an unconventional order parameter with 2Delta approximately omegaSC* approximately 37 meV.

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W. P. Gillin

Queen Mary University of London

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Francis L. Pratt

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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Laura Nuccio

Queen Mary University of London

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T. Kreouzis

Queen Mary University of London

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S. L. Lee

University of St Andrews

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C. Bernhard

University of Fribourg

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J.S. Lord

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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N. A. Morley

University of Sheffield

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E. M. Forgan

University of Birmingham

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