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1.
Appl Phys Lett ; 94(21): 212106, 2009 May 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19654883

ABSTRACT

Electric field-controlled ferromagnetism of (Zn,Co)O is demonstrated via anomalous Hall effect measurements. The electron carrier concentration in this material is 1.65x10(20) cm(-3) as measured via ordinary Hall effect at 4 K, and an anomalous Hall effect is observed up to 6 K, but with no hysteresis at any temperature. With positive electric gate field, the carrier concentration is increased by approximately 2%, resulting in a clear magnetic hysteresis at 4 K. The ability to reversibly induceeliminate ferromagnetism by applied gate field alone, measured via the effect on the carriers, is a clear sign of carrier-induced ferromagnetism in this system.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 89(24): 246601, 2002 Dec 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12484967

ABSTRACT

Measurements of the complex frequency dependent conductivity of uncompensated n-type silicon are reported. The experiments are done in the quantum limit, variant Planck's over 2pi omega>k(B)T, across a broad doping range on the insulating side of the metal-insulator transition. The low energy linear frequency dependence is consistent with theories of a Coulomb glass, but discrepancies exist in the relative magnitudes of the complex components. At higher energies we observe a crossover to a quadratic frequency dependence that is sharper than expected. The concentration dependence gives evidence that the Coulomb interaction energy is the energy scale that determines this crossover.

3.
Phys Rev Lett ; 87(11): 116602, 2001 Sep 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11531540

ABSTRACT

We have conducted temperature and frequency dependent transport measurements in amorphous NbxSi1-x samples in the insulating regime. We find a temperature dependent dc conductivity consistent with variable range hopping in a Coulomb glass. The frequency dependent response in the millimeter-wave frequency range can be described by the expression sigma(omega) varies with (-iota omega)(alpha) with the exponent somewhat smaller than 1. Our ac results are not consistent with extant theories for the hopping transport.

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