English

Indirect exchange coupling between localized magnetic moments in carbon nanotubes: a dynamic approach

Strongly Correlated Electrons 2008-03-04 v1

Abstract

Magnetic moments dilutely dispersed in a metallic host tend to be coupled through the conduction electrons of the metal. This indirect exchange coupling, known to occur for a variety of magnetic materials embedded in several different metallic structures, is of rather long range, especially for low-dimensional structures like carbon nanotubes. Motivated by recent claims that the indirect coupling between magnetic moments in precessional motion has a much longer range than its static counterpart, here we consider how magnetic atoms adsorbed to the walls of a metallic nanotube respond to a time-dependent perturbation that induces their magnetic moments to precess. By calculating the frequency-dependent spin susceptibility we are able to identify resonant peaks whose respective widths provide information about the dynamic aspect of the indirect exchange coupling. We show that by departing from a purely static representation to another in which the moments are allowed to precess, we change from what is already considered a long range interaction to another whose range is far superior. In other words, localized magnetic moments embedded in a metallic structure can feel each other's presence more easily when they are set in precessional motion. We argue that such an effect can have useful applications leading to large-scale spintronics devices.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0803.0028,
  title  = {Indirect exchange coupling between localized magnetic moments in carbon nanotubes: a dynamic approach},
  author = {A. T. Costa and R. B. Muniz and M. S. Ferreira},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0803.0028},
  year   = {2008}
}

Comments

7 pages, 6 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T10:17:22.309Z