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Dive into the research topics where R. A. Duine is active.

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Featured researches published by R. A. Duine.


Science | 2010

Spin transfer torques in MnSi at ultralow current densities

F. Jonietz; S. Mühlbauer; C. Pfleiderer; A. Neubauer; W. Münzer; Andreas Bauer; T. Adams; R. Georgii; P. Böni; R. A. Duine; K. Everschor; Markus Garst; Achim Rosch

Spin Control Controlling and manipulating the spin of an electron is a central requirement for applications in spintronics. Some of the challenges researchers are facing include efficient creation of spin currents, minimization of Joule heating, and extending the lifetime of electronic spins, which is especially important for quantum information applications. Costache and Valenzuela (p. 1645) address the first challenge by designing and fabricating an efficient and simple superconducting-based single-electron transistor that can produce spin current with controlled flow. Key to the design is asymmetric tunneling, which leads to a ratchet effect (or diode-like behavior), allowing the separation of up and down spins. Jonietz et al. (p. 1648) use electric currents five orders of magnitude smaller than those used previously in nanostructures to manipulate magnetization in a bulk material, MnSi, pointing the way toward decreased Joule heating in spintronic devices. This so-called spin-torque effect causes the rotation of the skyrmion lattice of spins, characteristic of MnSi, which is detected by neutron scattering. Finally, McCamey et al. (p. 1652) extend the short lifetime of an electronic spin of a phosphorous dopant by mapping it onto the much longer lived nuclear spin of the atom. Mapping the nuclear spin back onto the electronic spin allows production of a spin memory with a storage time exceeding 100s, which should prove useful for future practical applications. A complicated spin texture lattice in a bulk material rotates under the influence of a tiny electrical current. Spin manipulation using electric currents is one of the most promising directions in the field of spintronics. We used neutron scattering to observe the influence of an electric current on the magnetic structure in a bulk material. In the skyrmion lattice of manganese silicon, where the spins form a lattice of magnetic vortices similar to the vortex lattice in type II superconductors, we observe the rotation of the diffraction pattern in response to currents that are over five orders of magnitude smaller than those typically applied in experimental studies on current-driven magnetization dynamics in nanostructures. We attribute our observations to an extremely efficient coupling of inhomogeneous spin currents to topologically stable knots in spin structures.


Nature Materials | 2015

New perspectives for Rashba spin-orbit coupling

Aurelien Manchon; H. C. Koo; Junsaku Nitta; Sergey Frolov; R. A. Duine

In 1984, Bychkov and Rashba introduced a simple form of spin-orbit coupling to explain the peculiarities of electron spin resonance in two-dimensional semiconductors. Over the past 30 years, Rashba spin-orbit coupling has inspired a vast number of predictions, discoveries and innovative concepts far beyond semiconductors. The past decade has been particularly creative, with the realizations of manipulating spin orientation by moving electrons in space, controlling electron trajectories using spin as a steering wheel, and the discovery of new topological classes of materials. This progress has reinvigorated the interest of physicists and materials scientists in the development of inversion asymmetric structures, ranging from layered graphene-like materials to cold atoms. This Review discusses relevant recent and ongoing realizations of Rashba physics in condensed matter.


Nature Physics | 2015

Long-distance transport of magnon spin information in a magnetic insulator at room temperature

Ludo Cornelissen; Jing Liu; R. A. Duine; J. Ben Youssef; van Bart Wees

Although electron motion is prohibited in magnetic insulators, the electron spin can be transported by magnons. Such magnons, generated and detected using all-electrical methods, are now shown to travel micrometre distances at room temperature. The transport of spin information has been studied in various materials, such as metals1, semiconductors2 and graphene3. In these materials, spin is transported by the diffusion of conduction electrons4. Here we study the diffusion and relaxation of spin in a magnetic insulator, where the large bandgap prohibits the motion of electrons. Spin can still be transported, however, through the diffusion of non-equilibrium magnons, the quanta of spin-wave excitations in magnetically ordered materials. Here we show experimentally that these magnons can be excited and detected fully electrically5,6,7 in a linear response, and can transport spin angular momentum through the magnetic insulator yttrium iron garnet (YIG) over distances as large as 40 μm. We identify two transport regimes: the diffusion-limited regime for distances shorter than the magnon spin diffusion length, and the relaxation-limited regime for larger distances. With a model similar to the diffusion–relaxation model for electron spin transport in (semi)conducting materials, we extract the magnon spin diffusion length λ = 9.4 ± 0.6 μm in a thin 200 nm YIG film at room temperature.


Physical Review Letters | 2007

Changing Exchange Bias in Spin Valves with an Electric Current

Zhen Wei; A. Sharma; Alvaro S. Núñez; Paul M. Haney; R. A. Duine; J. Bass; A. H. MacDonald; Maxim Tsoi

An electrical current can transfer spin angular momentum to a ferromagnet. This novel physical phenomenon, called spin transfer, offers unprecedented spatial and temporal control over the magnetic state of a ferromagnet and has tremendous potential in a broad range of technologies, including magnetic memory and recording. Recently, it has been predicted that spin transfer is not limited to ferromagnets, but can also occur in antiferromagnetic materials and even be stronger under some conditions. In this paper we demonstrate transfer of spin angular momentum across an interface between ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic metals. The spin transfer is mediated by an electrical current of high density (~10^12 A/m^2) and revealed by variation in the exchange bias at the ferromagnet/antiferromagnet interface. We find that, depending on the polarity of the electrical current flowing across the interface, the strength of the exchange bias can either increase or decrease. This finding is explained by the theoretical prediction that a spin polarized current generates a torque on magnetic moments in the antiferromagnet. Current-mediated variation of exchange bias can be used to control the magnetic state of spin-valve devices, e.g., in magnetic memory applications.


Physics Reports | 2004

Atom-molecule coherence in Bose gases

R. A. Duine; H. T. C. Stoof

Abstract In an atomic gas near a Feshbach resonance, the energy of two colliding atoms is close to the energy of a bound state, i.e., a molecular state, in a closed channel that is coupled to the incoming open channel. Due to the different spin arrangements of the atoms in the open channel and the atoms in the molecular state, the energy difference between the bound state and the two-atom continuum threshold is experimentally accessible by means of the Zeeman interaction of the atomic spins with a magnetic field. As a result, it is in principle possible to vary the scattering length to any value by tuning the magnetic field. This level of experimental control has opened the road for many beautiful experiments, which recently led to the demonstration of coherence between atoms and molecules. This is achieved by observing coherent oscillations between atoms and molecules, analogous to coherent Rabi oscillations that occur in ordinary two-level systems. We review the many-body theory that describes coherence between atoms and molecules in terms of an effective quantum field theory for Feshbach-resonant interactions. The most important feature of this effective quantum field theory is that it incorporates the two-atom physics of the Feshbach resonance exactly, which turns out to be necessary to fully explain experiments with Bose–Einstein condensed atomic gases.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Nonadiabatic Spin Torque Investigated Using Thermally Activated Magnetic Domain Wall Dynamics

Matthias Eltschka; M. Wötzel; Jan Rhensius; Stephen Krzyk; U. Nowak; Mathias Kläui; Takeshi Kasama; Rafal E. Dunin-Borkowski; L. J. Heyderman; H.J. van Driel; R. A. Duine

Using transmission electron microscopy, we investigate the thermally activated motion of domain walls (DWs) between two positions in Permalloy (Ni80Fe20) nanowires at room temperature. We show that this purely thermal motion is well described by an Arrhenius law, allowing for a description of the DW as a quasiparticle in a one-dimensional potential landscape. By injecting small currents, the potential is modified, allowing for the determination of the nonadiabatic spin torque: βt=0.010±0.004 for a transverse DW and βv=0.073±0.026 for a vortex DW. The larger value is attributed to the higher magnetization gradients present.


Physical Review Letters | 2007

Thermally-Assisted Current-Driven Domain Wall Motion

R. A. Duine; Alvaro S. Núñez; A. H. MacDonald

Starting from the stochastic Landau-Lifschitz-Gilbert equation, we derive Langevin equations that describe the nonzero-temperature dynamics of a rigid domain wall. We derive an expression for the average drift velocity of the domain wall r(dw) as a function of the applied current, and find qualitative agreement with recent magnetic semiconductor experiments. Our model implies that at any nonzero-temperature r(dw) initially varies linearly with current, even in the absence of nonadiabatic spin torques.


Physical Review B | 2008

Spin pumping by a field-driven domain wall

R. A. Duine

We present the theory of spin pumping by a field-driven domain wall for the situation that spin is not fully conserved. We calculate the pumped current in a metallic ferromagnet to first order in the time derivative of the magnetization direction. Irrespective of the microscopic details, the result can be expressed in terms of the conductivities of the majority and minority electrons and the dissipative spin transfer torque parameter


Physical Review Letters | 2005

Itinerant Ferromagnetism in an Ultracold Atom Fermi Gas

R. A. Duine; A. H. MacDonald

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Physical Review B | 2016

Magnon spin transport driven by the magnon chemical potential in a magnetic insulator

Ludo Cornelissen; Kristian Peters; Gerrit E. W. Bauer; R. A. Duine; van Bart Wees

. The general expression is evaluated for the specific case of a field-driven domain wall and for that case depends strongly on the ratio of

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A. H. MacDonald

University of Texas at Austin

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Paul M. Haney

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Arne Brataas

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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Alvaro S. Núñez

University of Texas at Austin

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