@article{SiminSoltamovPoshakinskiyetal.2016, author = {Simin, D. and Soltamov, V. A. and Poshakinskiy, A. V. and Anisimov, A. N. and Babunts, R. A. and Tolmachev, D. O. and Mokhov, E. N. and Trupke, M. and Tarasenko, S. A. and Sperlich, A. and Baranov, P. G. and Dyakonov, V. and Astakhov, G. V.}, title = {All-Optical dc Nanotesla Magnetometry Using Silicon Vacancy Fine Structure in Isotopically Purified Silicon Carbide}, series = {Physical Review X}, volume = {6}, journal = {Physical Review X}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevX.6.031014}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-147682}, pages = {031014}, year = {2016}, abstract = {We uncover the fine structure of a silicon vacancy in isotopically purified silicon carbide (4H-\(^{28}\)SiC) and reveal not yet considered terms in the spin Hamiltonian, originated from the trigonal pyramidal symmetry of this spin-3/2 color center. These terms give rise to additional spin transitions, which would be otherwise forbidden, and lead to a level anticrossing in an external magnetic field. We observe a sharp variation of the photoluminescence intensity in the vicinity of this level anticrossing, which can be used for a purely all-optical sensing of the magnetic field. We achieve dc magnetic field sensitivity better than 100  nT/√Hz within a volume of 3×10\(^{-7}\)mm\(^3\) at room temperature and demonstrate that this contactless method is robust at high temperatures up to at least 500 K. As our approach does not require application of radio-frequency fields, it is scalable to much larger volumes. For an optimized light-trapping waveguide of 3  mm\(^3\), the projection noise limit is below 100  fT/√Hz.}, language = {en} } @article{MaassBentmannSeibeletal.2016, author = {Maaß, Henriette and Bentmann, Hendrik and Seibel, Christoph and Tusche, Christian and Eremeev, Sergey V. and Peixoto, Thiago R.F. and Tereshchenko, Oleg E. and Kokh, Konstantin A. and Chulkov, Evgueni V. and Kirschner, J{\"u}rgen and Reinert, Friedrich}, title = {Spin-texture inversion in the giant Rashba semiconductor BiTeI}, series = {Nature Communications}, volume = {7}, journal = {Nature Communications}, doi = {10.1038/ncomms11621}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-173769}, year = {2016}, abstract = {Semiconductors with strong spin-orbit interaction as the underlying mechanism for the generation of spin-polarized electrons are showing potential for applications in spintronic devices. Unveiling the full spin texture in momentum space for such materials and its relation to the microscopic structure of the electronic wave functions is experimentally challenging and yet essential for exploiting spin-orbit effects for spin manipulation. Here we employ a state-of-the-art photoelectron momentum microscope with a multichannel spin filter to directly image the spin texture of the layered polar semiconductor BiTeI within the full two-dimensional momentum plane. Our experimental results, supported by relativistic ab initio calculations, demonstrate that the valence and conduction band electrons in BiTeI have spin textures of opposite chirality and of pronounced orbital dependence beyond the standard Rashba model, the latter giving rise to strong optical selection-rule effects on the photoelectron spin polarization. These observations open avenues for spin-texture manipulation by atomic-layer and charge carrier control in polar semiconductors.}, language = {en} }