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Featured researches published by David Jacob.


Physical Review B | 2006

Coherent transport in graphene nanoconstrictions

F. Muñoz-Rojas; David Jacob; Joaquín Fernández-Rossier; J. J. Palacios

We study the effect of a structural nanoconstriction on the coherent transport properties of otherwise ideal zigzag-edged infinitely long graphene ribbons. The electronic structure is calculated with the standard oneorbital tight-binding model and the linear conductance is obtained using the Landauer formula. We find that, since the zero-bias current is carried in the bulk of the ribbon, this is very robust with respect to a variety of constriction geometries and edge defects. In contrast, the curve of zero-bias conductance versus gate voltage departs from the 2n +1 e 2 /h staircase of the ideal case as soon as a single atom is removed from the sample. We also find that wedge-shaped constrictions can present nonconducting states fully localized in the constriction close to the Fermi energy. The interest of these localized states in regards to the formation of quantum dots in graphene is discussed.


Nature | 2009

The Kondo effect in ferromagnetic atomic contacts

M. Reyes Calvo; Joaquín Fernández-Rossier; J. J. Palacios; David Jacob; Douglas Natelson; Carlos Untiedt

Iron, cobalt and nickel are archetypal ferromagnetic metals. In bulk, electronic conduction in these materials takes place mainly through the s and p electrons, whereas the magnetic moments are mostly in the narrow d-electron bands, where they tend to align. This general picture may change at the nanoscale because electrons at the surfaces of materials experience interactions that differ from those in the bulk. Here we show direct evidence for such changes: electronic transport in atomic-scale contacts of pure ferromagnets (iron, cobalt and nickel), despite their strong bulk ferromagnetism, unexpectedly reveal Kondo physics, that is, the screening of local magnetic moments by the conduction electrons below a characteristic temperature. The Kondo effect creates a sharp resonance at the Fermi energy, affecting the electrical properties of the system; this appears as a Fano–Kondo resonance in the conductance characteristics as observed in other artificial nanostructures. The study of hundreds of contacts shows material-dependent log-normal distributions of the resonance width that arise naturally from Kondo theory. These resonances broaden and disappear with increasing temperature, also as in standard Kondo systems. Our observations, supported by calculations, imply that coordination changes can significantly modify magnetism at the nanoscale. Therefore, in addition to standard micromagnetic physics, strong electronic correlations along with atomic-scale geometry need to be considered when investigating the magnetic properties of magnetic nanostructures.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2014

Control of single-spin magnetic anisotropy by exchange coupling

Jenny C. Oberg; M. Reyes Calvo; F. Delgado; Maria Moro-Lagares; David Serrate; David Jacob; Joaquín Fernández-Rossier; Cyrus F. Hirjibehedin

The properties of quantum systems interacting with their environment, commonly called open quantum systems, can be affected strongly by this interaction. Although this can lead to unwanted consequences, such as causing decoherence in qubits used for quantum computation, it can also be exploited as a probe of the environment. For example, magnetic resonance imaging is based on the dependence of the spin relaxation times of protons in water molecules in a hosts tissue. Here we show that the excitation energy of a single spin, which is determined by magnetocrystalline anisotropy and controls its stability and suitability for use in magnetic data-storage devices, can be modified by varying the exchange coupling of the spin to a nearby conductive electrode. Using scanning tunnelling microscopy and spectroscopy, we observe variations up to a factor of two of the spin excitation energies of individual atoms as the strength of the spins coupling to the surrounding electronic bath changes. These observations, combined with calculations, show that exchange coupling can strongly modify the magnetic anisotropy. This system is thus one of the few open quantum systems in which the energy levels, and not just the excited-state lifetimes, can be renormalized controllably. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the magnetocrystalline anisotropy, a property normally determined by the local structure around a spin, can be tuned electronically. These effects may play a significant role in the development of spintronic devices in which an individual magnetic atom or molecule is coupled to conducting leads.


Physical Review B | 2005

Magnetic and orbital blocking in Ni nanocontacts

David Jacob; Joaquín Fernández-Rossier; J. J. Palacios

J.J.P. acknowledges financial support from Grants No. 1FD97-1358 (FEDER funds) and MAT2002-04429-C03 (MCyT). D.J. acknowledges financial support from MECD under Grant No. UAC-2004-0052. J.F.R. acknowledges financial support from Grants No. MAT2003-08109-C02-01 (MCyT), UA/GRE03-15 (Universidad de Alicante), and Ramon y Cajal Program (MCyT).


Physical Review B | 2010

Orbital selective and tunable Kondo effect of magnetic adatoms on graphene: Correlated electronic structure calculations

David Jacob; Gabriel Kotliar

We have studied the effect of dynamical correlations on the electronic structure of single Co adatoms on graphene monolayers with a recently developed novel method for nanoscopic materials that combines density functional calculations with a fully dynamical treatment of the strongly interacting 3d-electrons. The coupling of the Co 3d-shell to the graphene substrate and hence the dynamic correlations are strongly dependent on the orbital symmetry and the system parameters (temperature, distance of the adatom from the graphene sheet, gate voltage). When the Kondo effect takes place, we find that the dynamical correlations give rise to strongly temperature-dependent peaks in the Co 3d-spectra near the Fermi level. Moreover, we find that the Kondo effect can be tuned by the application of a gate voltage. It turns out that the position of the Kondo peaks is pinned to the Dirac points of graphene rather than to the chemical potential.


Physical Review B | 2013

Kondo effect and spin quenching in high-spin molecules on metal substrates

David Jacob; M. Soriano; J. J. Palacios

This work was supported by MICINN under Grants No.FIS2010-21883 and No. CONSOLIDER CSD2007-0010.M.S. acknowledges computational support from the CCC of the Universidad Aut´onoma de Madrid. We are also grateful to K. Haule for providing us with the OCA impurity solver


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2015

Towards a full ab initio theory of strong electronic correlations in nanoscale devices

David Jacob

In this paper I give a detailed account of an ab initio methodology for describing strong electronic correlations in nanoscale devices hosting transition metal atoms with open d- or f-shells. The method combines Kohn-Sham density functional theory for treating the weakly interacting electrons on a static mean-field level with non-perturbative many-body methods for the strongly interacting electrons in the open d- and f-shells. An effective description of the strongly interacting electrons in terms of a multi-orbital Anderson impurity model is obtained by projection onto the strongly correlated subspace properly taking into account the non-orthogonality of the atomic basis set. A special focus lies on the ab initio calculation of the effective screened interaction matrix U for the Anderson model. Solution of the effective Anderson model with the one-crossing approximation or other impurity solver techniques yields the dynamic correlations within the strongly correlated subspace giving rise e.g. to the Kondo effect. As an example the method is applied to the case of a Co adatom on the Cu(0 0 1) surface. The calculated low-bias tunnel spectra show Fano-Kondo lineshapes similar to those measured in experiments. The exact shape of the Fano-Kondo feature as well as its width depend quite strongly on the filling of the Co 3d-shell. Although this somewhat hampers accurate quantitative predictions regarding lineshapes and Kondo temperatures, the overall physical situation can be predicted quite reliably.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2011

Critical comparison of electrode models in density functional theory based quantum transport calculations

David Jacob; J. J. Palacios

We study the performance of two different electrode models in quantum transport calculations based on density functional theory: parametrized Bethe lattices and quasi-one-dimensional wires or nanowires. A detailed account of implementation details in both the cases is given. From the systematic study of nanocontacts made of representative metallic elements, we can conclude that the parametrized electrode models represent an excellent compromise between computational cost and electronic structure definition as long as the aim is to compare with experiments where the precise atomic structure of the electrodes is not relevant or defined with precision. The results obtained using parametrized Bethe lattices are essentially similar to the ones obtained with quasi-one-dimensional electrodes for large enough cross-sections of these, adding a natural smearing to the transmission curves that mimics the true nature of polycrystalline electrodes. The latter are more demanding from the computational point of view, but present the advantage of expanding the range of applicability of transport calculations to situations where the electrodes have a well-defined atomic structure, as is the case for carbon nanotubes, graphene nanoribbons, or semiconducting nanowires. All the analysis is done with the help of codes developed by the authors which can be found in the quantum transport toolbox ALACANT and are publicly available.


Physical Review B | 2006

Orbital eigenchannel analysis for ab initio quantum transport calculations

David Jacob; J. J. Palacios

We show how to extract the orbital contribution to the transport eigenchannels from a first-principles quantum transport calculation in a nanoscopic conductor. This is achieved by calculating and diagonalizing the first-principles transmission matrix reduced to selected scattering cross sections. As an example, the orbital nature of the eigenchannels in the case of Ni nanocontacts is explored, stressing the difficulties inherent to the use of nonorthogonal basis sets.


Physical Review B | 2006

Emergence of half-metallicity in suspended NiO chains: Ab initio electronic structure and quantum transport calculations

David Jacob; Joaquín Fernández-Rossier; J. J. Palacios

D.J. acknowledges financial support from MECD under Grant No. UAC-2004-0052. J.F.R. acknowledges financial support from Grants No. FIS200402356 (MCyT) and No. GV05-152, and the Ramon y Cajal Program (MCyT). J.J.P. acknowledges financial support from Grant No. MAT2005-07369.

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J. J. Palacios

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Maria Soriano

Autonomous University of Madrid

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