Sahil Patel
University of California, Santa Barbara
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Featured researches published by Sahil Patel.
Applied Physics Letters | 2014
Sahil Patel; Jason K. Kawasaki; John Logan; Brian D. Schultz; Johan Adell; Balasubramanian Thiagarajan; Anders Mikkelsen; Chris J. Palmstrøm
The surface and electronic structure of single crystal thin films of PtLuSb (001) grown by molecular beam epitaxy were studied. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS), photoemission spectroscopy, and temperature dependent Hall measurements of PtLuSb thin films are consistent with a zero-gap semiconductor or semi-metal. STS and photoemission measurements show a decrease in density of states approaching the Fermi level for both valence and conduction bands as well as a slight shift of the Fermi level position into the valence band. Temperature dependent Hall measurements also corroborate the Fermi level position by measurement of p-type carriers.
Nature Communications | 2016
Changjiang Liu; Sahil Patel; T. A. Peterson; Chad Geppert; Kevin Christie; Gordon Stecklein; C. J. Palmstrøm; P. A. Crowell
A distinguishing feature of spin accumulation in ferromagnet–semiconductor devices is its precession in a magnetic field. This is the basis for detection techniques such as the Hanle effect, but these approaches become ineffective as the spin lifetime in the semiconductor decreases. For this reason, no electrical Hanle measurement has been demonstrated in GaAs at room temperature. We show here that by forcing the magnetization in the ferromagnet to precess at resonance instead of relying only on the Larmor precession of the spin accumulation in the semiconductor, an electrically generated spin accumulation can be detected up to 300 K. The injection bias and temperature dependence of the measured spin signal agree with those obtained using traditional methods. We further show that this approach enables a measurement of short spin lifetimes (<100 ps), a regime that is not accessible in semiconductors using traditional Hanle techniques.
Applied Physics Letters | 2014
Changjiang Liu; Yakov Boyko; Chad Geppert; Kevin Christie; Gordon Stecklein; Sahil Patel; Chris J. Palmstrøm; P. A. Crowell
We observe a dc voltage peak at ferromagnetic resonance (FMR) in samples consisting of a single ferromagnetic (FM) layer grown epitaxially on the n-GaAs (001) surface. The FMR peak is detected as an interfacial voltage with a symmetric line shape and is present in samples based on various FM/n-GaAs heterostructures, including Co2MnSi/n-GaAs, Co2FeSi/n-GaAs, and Fe/n-GaAs. We show that the interface bias voltage dependence of the FMR signal is identical to that of the tunneling anisotropic magnetoresistance (TAMR) over most of the bias range. Furthermore, we show how the precessing magnetization yields a dc FMR signal through the TAMR effect and how the TAMR phenomenon can be used to predict the angular dependence of the FMR signal. This TAMR-induced FMR peak can be observed under conditions where no spin accumulation is present and no spin-polarized current flows in the semiconductor.
Physical Review B | 2015
Nicholas J. Harmon; T. A. Peterson; Chad Geppert; Sahil Patel; C. J. Palmstrøm; P. A. Crowell; Michael E. Flatté
The hyperfine field from dynamically polarized nuclei in n-GaAs is very spatially inhomogeneous, as the nu- clear polarization process is most efficient near the randomly-distributed donors. Electrons with polarized spins traversing the bulk semiconductor will experience this inhomogeneous hyperfine field as an effective fluctuating spin precession rate, and thus the spin polarization of an electron ensemble will relax. A theory of spin relaxation based on the theory of random walks is applied to such an ensemble precessing in an oblique magnetic field, and the precise form of the (unequal) longitudinal and transverse spin relaxation analytically derived. To investigate this mechanism, electrical three-terminal Hanle measurements were performed on epitaxially grown Co
Physical Review B | 2015
Kevin Christie; Chad Geppert; Sahil Patel; Qi Hu; Chris J. Palmstrøm; P. A. Crowell
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Applied Physics Letters | 2018
S. D. Harrington; John Logan; S. Chatterjee; Sahil Patel; A. D. Rice; M. M. Feldman; C. M. Polley; T. Balasubramanian; Anders Mikkelsen; Chris J. Palmstrøm
MnSi/
Nano Letters | 2017
Martin Hjort; Peter Kratzer; Sebastian Lehmann; Sahil Patel; Kimberly A. Dick; Chris J. Palmstrøm; Rainer Timm; Anders Mikkelsen
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Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
P. A. Crowell; Changjiang Liu; Sahil Patel; Tim Peterson; Chad Geppert; Kevin Christie; Gordon Stecklein; C. J. Palmstrøm
-GaAs heterostructures fabricated into electrical spin injection devices. The proposed anisotropic spin relaxation mechanism is required to satisfactorily describe the Hanle lineshapes when the applied field is oriented at large oblique angles.
Physical Review B | 2016
T. A. Peterson; Sahil Patel; Chad Geppert; Kevin Christie; Ashutosh Rath; D. Pennachio; Michael E. Flatté; Paul M. Voyles; Chris J. Palmstrøm; P. A. Crowell
We investigate the dynamically polarized nuclear-spin system in Fe/\emph{n}-GaAs heterostructures using the response of the electron-spin system to nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) in lateral spin-valve devices. The hyperfine interaction is known to act more strongly on donor-bound electron states than on those in the conduction band. We provide a quantitative model of the temperature dependence of the occupation of donor sites. With this model we calculate the ratios of the hyperfine and quadrupolar nuclear relaxation rates of each isotope. For all temperatures measured, quadrupolar relaxation limits the spatial extent of nuclear spin-polarization to within a Bohr radius of the donor sites and is directly responsible for the isotope dependence of the measured NMR signal amplitude. The hyperfine interaction is also responsible for the
Journal of Crystal Growth | 2016
Sahil Patel; John Logan; Sean D. Harrington; Brian D. Schultz; Chris J. Palmstrøm
2\text{ kHz}