Gac Jones
University of Cambridge
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Publication
Featured researches published by Gac Jones.
Physical Review Letters | 2016
M. Kataoka; N. Johnson; Clive Emary; Patrick See; J. P. Griffiths; Gac Jones; I. Farrer; David A. Ritchie; M. Pepper; T. J. B. M. Janssen
We report time-of-flight measurements on electrons traveling in quantum Hall edge states. Hot-electron wave packets are emitted one per cycle into edge states formed along a depleted sample boundary. The electron arrival time is detected by driving a detector barrier with a square wave that acts as a shutter. By adding an extra path using a deflection barrier, we measure a delay in the arrival time, from which the edge-state velocity v is deduced. We find that v follows 1/B dependence, in good agreement with the E[over →]×B[over →] drift. The edge potential is estimated from the energy dependence of v using a harmonic approximation.
Nature Nanotechnology | 2015
Pojen Chuang; Sheng-Chin Ho; Luke Smith; F. Sfigakis; M. Pepper; Chin-Hung Chen; Ju-Chun Fan; J. P. Griffiths; I. Farrer; Harvey E. Beere; Gac Jones; David A. Ritchie; T-M Chen
The spin field-effect transistor envisioned by Datta and Das opens a gateway to spin information processing. Although the coherent manipulation of electron spins in semiconductors is now possible, the realization of a functional spin field-effect transistor for information processing has yet to be achieved, owing to several fundamental challenges such as the low spin-injection efficiency due to resistance mismatch, spin relaxation and the spread of spin precession angles. Alternative spin transistor designs have therefore been proposed, but these differ from the field-effect transistor concept and require the use of optical or magnetic elements, which pose difficulties for incorporation into integrated circuits. Here, we present an all-electric and all-semiconductor spin field-effect transistor in which these obstacles are overcome by using two quantum point contacts as spin injectors and detectors. Distinct engineering architectures of spin-orbit coupling are exploited for the quantum point contacts and the central semiconductor channel to achieve complete control of the electron spins (spin injection, manipulation and detection) in a purely electrical manner. Such a device is compatible with large-scale integration and holds promise for future spintronic devices for information processing.
Physical Review B | 2014
Luke Smith; H Al-Taie; F. Sfigakis; P. See; Aaj Lesage; B Xu; J. P. Griffiths; Harvey E. Beere; Gac Jones; David A. Ritchie; M. J. Kelly; Charles Gordon Smith
The properties of conductance in one-dimensional (1D) quantum wires are statistically investigated using an array of 256 lithographically identical split gates, fabricated on a GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure. All the split gates are measured during a single cooldown under the same conditions. Electron many-body effects give rise to an anomalous feature in the conductance of a one-dimensional quantum wire, known as the 0.7 structure (or 0.7 anomaly). To handle the large data set, a method of automatically estimating the conductance value of the 0.7 structure is developed. Large differences are observed in the strength and value of the 0.7 structure [from 0.63 to 0.84×(2e2/h)], despite the constant temperature and identical device design. Variations in the 1D potential profile are quantified by estimating the curvature of the barrier in the direction of electron transport, following a saddle-point model. The 0.7 structure appears to be highly sensitive to the specific confining potential within individual devices.
Physical Review B | 2015
Ed Herbschleb; R Puddy; P Marconcini; J. P. Griffiths; Gac Jones; M Macucci; Charles Gordon Smith; Malcolm Connolly
We fabricate a graphene p-n-p heterojunction and exploit the coherence of weakly-confined Dirac quasiparticles to resolve the underlying scattering potential using low temperature scanning gate microscopy. The tip-induced perturbation to the heterojunction modifies the condition for resonant scattering, enabling us to detect localized Fabry-Perot cavities from the focal point of halos in scanning gate images. In addition to halos over the bulk we also observe ones spatially registered to the physical edge of the graphene. Guided by quantum transport simulations we attribute these to modified resonant scattering at the edges within elongated cavities that form due to focusing of the electrostatic field.
Nature Communications | 2017
Shun-Tsung Lo; Chin-Hung Chen; Ju-Chun Fan; Luke Smith; Graham Creeth; Che-Wei Chang; M. Pepper; J. P. Griffiths; I. Farrer; Harvey E. Beere; Gac Jones; David A. Ritchie; Tse-Ming Chen
The spatial separation of electron spins followed by the control of their individual spin dynamics has recently emerged as an essential ingredient in many proposals for spin-based technologies because it would enable both of the two spin species to be simultaneously utilized, distinct from most of the current spintronic studies and technologies wherein only one spin species could be handled at a time. Here we demonstrate that the spatial spin splitting of a coherent beam of electrons can be achieved and controlled using the interplay between an external magnetic field and Rashba spin–orbit interaction in semiconductor nanostructures. The technique of transverse magnetic focusing is used to detect this spin separation. More notably, our ability to engineer the spin–orbit interactions enables us to simultaneously manipulate and probe the coherent spin dynamics of both spin species and hence their correlation, which could open a route towards spintronics and spin-based quantum information processing.
Physical Review B | 2016
Oleksandr Tsyplyatyev; Aj Schofield; Y Jin; M Moreno; Wk Tan; As Anirban; C. J. B. Ford; J. P. Griffiths; I. Farrer; Gac Jones; David A. Ritchie
The natural excitations of an interacting one-dimensional system at low energy are the hydrodynamic modes of a Luttinger liquid, protected by the Lorentz invariance of the linear dispersion. We show that beyond low energies, where the quadratic dispersion reduces the symmetry to Galilean, the main character of the many-body excitations changes into a hierarchy: calculations of dynamic correlation functions for fermions (without spin) show that the spectral weights of the excitations are proportional to powers of nR n2 n/ nL n2 n, where nR n is a length-scale related to interactions and nL n is the system length. Thus only small numbers of excitations carry the principal spectral power in representative regions on the energy-momentum planes. We have analyzed the spectral function in detail and have shown that the first-level (strongest) excitations form a mode with parabolic dispersion, like that of a renormalized single particle. The second-level excitations produce a singular power-law line shape to the first-level mode and multiple power laws at the spectral edge. We have illustrated a crossover to a Luttinger liquid at low energy by calculating the local density of states through all energy scales: from linear to nonlinear, and to above the chemical potential energies. In order to test this model, we have carried out experiments to measure the momentum-resolved tunneling of electrons (fermions with spin) from/to a wire formed within a GaAs heterostructure. We observe a well-resolved spin-charge separation at low energy with appreciable interaction strength and only a parabolic dispersion of the first-level mode at higher energies. We find a structure resembling the second-level excitations, which dies away rapidly at high momentum in line with the theoretical predictions here.
Journal of Physics D | 2016
Rhodri Mansell; J-B Laloë; S. N. Holmes; A. Petrou; I. Farrer; Gac Jones; David A. Ritchie; C. H. W. Barnes
InGaAs quantum well light emitting diodes (LED) with spin-injecting, epitaxial Fe contacts were nfabricated using an in situ wafer transfer process where the semiconductor wafer was transferred nunder ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) conditions to a metals growth chamber to achieve a high quality ninterface between the two materials. The spin LED devices were measured optically with applied nmagnetic fields in either the Faraday or the oblique Hanle geometries in two experimental setups. nOptical polarizations efficiencies of 4.5% in the Faraday geometry and 1.5% in the Hanle ngeometry are shown to be equivalent. The polarization efficiency of the electroluminescence is nseen to decay as the temperature increases although the spin lifetime remains constant due to the ninfluence of the D’yakonov–Perel’ spin scattering mechanism in the quantum well.
Physical Review Letters | 2015
Oleksandr Tsyplyatyev; Aj Schofield; Y Jin; M Moreno; Wk Tan; C. J. B. Ford; J. P. Griffiths; I. Farrer; Gac Jones; David A. Ritchie
Studying interacting fermions in one dimension at high energy, we find a hierarchy in the spectral weights of the excitations theoretically, and we observe evidence for second-level excitations experimentally. Diagonalizing a model of fermions (without spin), we show that levels of the hierarchy are separated by powers of R^{2}/L^{2}, where R is a length scale related to interactions and L is the system length. The first-level (strongest) excitations form a mode with parabolic dispersion, like that of a renormalized single particle. The second-level excitations produce a singular power-law line shape to the first-level mode and multiple power laws at the spectral edge. We measure momentum-resolved tunneling of electrons (fermions with spin) from or to a wire formed within a GaAs heterostructure, which shows parabolic dispersion of the first-level mode and well-resolved spin-charge separation at low energy with appreciable interaction strength. We find structure resembling the second-level excitations, which dies away quite rapidly at high momentum.
Physical review applied | 2016
Luke Smith; H Al-Taie; Aaj Lesage; K. J. Thomas; F. Sfigakis; P. See; J. P. Griffiths; I. Farrer; Gac Jones; David A. Ritchie; M. J. Kelly; Charles Gordon Smith
© 2016 American Physical Society.
Nature Communications | 2016
M Moreno; C. J. B. Ford; Y Jin; J. P. Griffiths; I. Farrer; Gac Jones; David A. Ritchie; Oleksandr Tsyplyatyev; Aj Schofield
One-dimensional electronic fluids are peculiar conducting systems, where the fundamental role of interactions leads to exotic, emergent phenomena, such as spin-charge (spinon-holon) separation. The distinct low-energy properties of these 1D metals are successfully described within the theory of linear Luttinger liquids, but the challenging task of describing their high-energy nonlinear properties has long remained elusive. Recently, novel theoretical approaches accounting for nonlinearity have been developed, yet the rich phenomenology that they predict remains barely explored experimentally. Here, we probe the nonlinear spectral characteristics of short GaAs quantum wires by tunnelling spectroscopy, using an advanced device consisting of 6000 wires. We find evidence for the existence of an inverted (spinon) shadow band in the main region of the particle sector, one of the central predictions of the new nonlinear theories. A (holon) band with reduced effective mass is clearly visible in the particle sector at high energies.