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Dive into the research topics where Alex Matos-Abiague is active.

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Featured researches published by Alex Matos-Abiague.


Physical Review Letters | 2007

Tunneling Anisotropic Magnetoresistance and Spin-Orbit Coupling in Fe/GaAs/Au Tunnel Junctions

Jürgen Moser; Alex Matos-Abiague; Dieter Schuh; Werner Wegscheider; Jaroslav Fabian; Dieter Weiss

We report the observation of tunneling anisotropic magnetoresistance effect in the epitaxial metal-semiconductor system Fe/GaAs/Au. The observed twofold anisotropy of the resistance can be switched by reversing the bias voltage, suggesting that the effect originates from the interference of the spin-orbit coupling at the interfaces. Corresponding model calculations reproduce the experimental findings very well.


Physical Review B | 2009

Anisotropic tunneling magnetoresistance and tunneling anisotropic magnetoresistance: Spin-orbit coupling in magnetic tunnel junctions

Alex Matos-Abiague; Jaroslav Fabian

The effects of the spin-orbit coupling (SOC) on the tunneling magnetoresistance of ferromagnet/semiconductor/normal-metal tunnel junctions are investigated. Analytical expressions for the tunneling anisotropic magnetoresistance (TAMR) are derived within an approximation in which the dependence of the magnetoresistance on the magnetization orientation in the ferromagnet originates from the interference between Bychkov-Rashba and Dresselhaus SOCs that appear at junction interfaces and in the tunneling region. We also investigate the TAMR effect in ferromagnet/semiconductor/ferromagnet tunnel junctions. The conventional tunneling magnetoresistance (TMR) measures the difference between the magnetoresistance in parallel and antiparallel configurations. We show that in ferromagnet/semiconductor/ferromagnet heterostructures, because of the SOC effects, the conventional TMR becomes anisotropic—we refer to it as the anisotropic tunneling magnetoresistance (ATMR). The ATMR describes the changes in the TMR when the axis along which the parallel and antiparallel configurations are defined is rotated with respect to a crystallographic reference axis. Within the proposed model, depending on the magnetization directions in the ferromagnets, the interplay of Bychkov-Rashba and Dresselhaus SOCs produces differences between the rates of transmitted and reflected spins at the ferromagnet/semiconductor interfaces, which results in an anisotropic local density of states at the Fermi surface and in the TAMR and ATMR effects. Model calculations for Fe/GaAs/Fe tunnel junctions are presented. Finally, based on rather general symmetry considerations, we deduce the form of the magnetoresistance dependence on the absolute orientations of the magnetizations in the ferromagnets.


Physical Review B | 2009

Anisotropic plasmons in a two-dimensional electron gas with spin-orbit interaction

Samvel Badalyan; Alex Matos-Abiague; Giovanni Vignale; Jaroslav Fabian

Spin-orbit coupling-induced anisotropies of plasmon dynamics are investigated in two-dimensional semiconductor structures. The interplay of the linear Bychkov-Rashba and Dresselhaus spin-orbit interactions drastically affects the plasmon spectrum: the dynamical structure factor exhibits variations over several decades, prohibiting plasmon propagation in specific directions. While this plasmon filtering makes the presence of spin-orbit coupling in plasmon dynamics observable, it also offers a control tool for plasmonic devices. Remarkably, if the strengths of the two interactions are equal, not only the anisotropy but all the traces of the linear spin-orbit coupling in the collective response disappear.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Magnetoanisotropic Andreev Reflection in Ferromagnet-Superconductor Junctions

Petra Högl; Alex Matos-Abiague; Igor Žutić; Jaroslav Fabian

Andreev reflection spectroscopy of ferromagnet-superconductor (FS) junctions [corrected] is an important probe of spin polarization. We theoretically investigate spin-polarized transport in FS junctions in the presence of Rashba and Dresselhaus interfacial spin-orbit fields and show that Andreev reflection can be controlled by changing the magnetization orientation. We predict a giant in- and out-of-plane magnetoanisotropy of the junction conductance. If the ferromagnet is highly spin polarized-in the half-metal limit-the magnetoanisotropic Andreev reflection depends universally on the spin-orbit fields only. Our results show that Andreev reflection spectroscopy can be used for sensitive probing of interfacial spin-orbit fields in a FS junction.


Physical Review B | 2012

Coulomb drag between massless and massive fermions

Benedikt Scharf; Alex Matos-Abiague

We theoretically investigate the frictional drag induced by the Coulomb interaction between spa- tially separated massless and massive fermions at low temperatures. As a model system, we use a double-layer structure composed of a two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) and a n-doped graphene layer. We analyze this system numerically and also present analytical formulae for the drag re- sistivity in the limit of large and small interlayer separation. Both, the temperature and density dependence are investigated and compared to 2DEG-2DEG and graphene-graphene double-layer structures. Whereas the density dependence of the transresistivity for small interlayer separation differs already in the leading order for each of those three structures, we find the leading order con- tribution of density dependence in the large interlayer separation limit to exhibit the same density dependence in each case. In order to distinguish between the different systems in the large interlayer separation limit, we also investigate the subleading contribution to the transresistivity. Furthermore, we study the Coulomb drag in a double-layer structure consisting of n-doped bilayer and monolayer graphene, which we find to possess the same qualitative behavior as the 2DEG-graphene system.


Physical Review B | 2009

Orbital effects on tunneling anisotropic magnetoresistance in Fe/GaAs/Au junctions

Michael Wimmer; M. Lobenhofer; Jürgen Moser; Alex Matos-Abiague; Dieter Schuh; Werner Wegscheider; Jaroslav Fabian; Klaus Richter; Dieter Weiss

We report experiments on epitaxially grown Fe/GaAs/Au tunnel junctions demonstrating that the tunneling anisotropic magnetoresistance (TAMR) effect can be controlled by a magnetic field. Theoretical modelling shows that the interplay of the orbital effects of a magnetic field and the Dresselhaus spin-orbit coupling in the GaAs barrier leads to an independent contribution to the TAMR effect with uniaxial symmetry, whereas the Bychkov-Rashba spin-orbit coupling does not play a role. The effect is intrinsic to barriers with bulk inversion asymmetry.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Magnetic control of spin-orbit fields: a first-principles study of Fe/GaAs junctions.

Martin Gmitra; Alex Matos-Abiague; Claudia Draxl; Jaroslav Fabian

The microscopic structure of spin-orbit fields for the technologically important Fe/GaAs interface is uncovered from first principles. A symmetry based method allows us to obtain the spin-orbit fields-both their magnitude and orientation-for a generic Bloch state, from the electronic band structure for any in-plane magnetization orientation. It is demonstrated that the spin-orbit fields depend not only on the electric field across the interface, but also surprisingly strongly on the Fe magnetization orientation, opening prospects for their magnetic control. These results give important clues in searching for spin-orbit transport and optical phenomena in ferromagnet/nonmagnet heterostructures.


Physical Review B | 2010

Beating of Friedel oscillations induced by spin-orbit interaction

Samvel Badalyan; Alex Matos-Abiague; Giovanni Vignale; Jaroslav Fabian

By exploiting our recently derived exact formula for the Lindhard polarization function in the presence of Bychkov-Rashba (BR) and Dresselhaus (D) spin-orbit interaction (SOI), we show that the interplay of different SOI mechanisms induces highly anisotropic modifications of the static dielectric function. We find that under certain circumstances the polarization function exhibits doubly singular behavior. It leads to an intriguing phenomenon, beating of Friedel oscillations, which can be controlled by external fields. This effect is a general feature of systems with BR+D SOI and should be observed in structures with a sufficiently strong SOI.


Physical Review B | 2012

Magnetic properties of HgTe quantum wells

Benedikt Scharf; Alex Matos-Abiague; Jaroslav Fabian

Using analytical formulas as well as a finite-difference scheme, we investigate the magnetic field dependence of the energy spectra and magnetic edge states of HgTe/CdTe-based quantum wells in the presence of perpendicular magnetic fields and hard walls for the band-structure parameters corresponding to the normal and inverted regimes. Whereas one can not find counterpropagating, spin-polarized states in the normal regime, below the crossover point between the uppermost (electronlike) valence and lowest (holelike) conduction Landau levels, one can still observe such states at finite magnetic fields in the inverted regime, although these states are no longer protected by time-reversal symmetry. Furthermore, the bulk magnetization and susceptibility in HgTe quantum wells are studied, in particular their dependence on the magnetic field, chemical potential, and carrier densities. We find that for fixed chemical potentials as well as for fixed carrier densities, the magnetization and magnetic susceptibility in both the normal and the inverted regimes exhibit de Haas–van Alphen oscillations, the amplitude of which decreases with increasing temperature. Moreover, if the band structure is inverted, the ground-state magnetization (and consequently also the ground-state susceptibility) is discontinuous at the crossover point between the uppermost valence and lowest conduction Landau levels. At finite temperatures and/or doping, this discontinuity is canceled by the contribution from the electrons and holes and the total magnetization and susceptibility are continuous. In the normal regime, this discontinuity of the ground-state magnetization does not arise and the magnetization is continuous for zero as well as finite temperatures.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Magnetic Proximity Effects in Transition-Metal Dichalcogenides: Converting Excitons

Benedikt Scharf; Gaofeng Xu; Alex Matos-Abiague; Igor Žutić

The two-dimensional character and reduced screening in monolayer transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) lead to the ubiquitous formation of robust excitons with binding energies orders of magnitude larger than in bulk semiconductors. Focusing on neutral excitons, bound electron-hole pairs that dominate the optical response in TMDs, it is shown that they can provide fingerprints for magnetic proximity effects in magnetic heterostructures. These proximity effects cannot be described by the widely used single-particle description but instead reveal the possibility of a conversion between optically inactive and active excitons by rotating the magnetization of the magnetic substrate. With recent breakthroughs in fabricating Mo- and W-based magnetic TMD heterostructures, this emergent optical response can be directly tested experimentally.

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Martin Gmitra

University of Regensburg

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Igor Žutić

State University of New York System

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Samvel Badalyan

Chonnam National University

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Jong E. Han

State University of New York System

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Dieter Weiss

University of Regensburg

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Geoffrey L. Fatin

State University of New York System

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