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Nonlinear thermoelectric effects in high-field superconductor-ferromagnet tunnel junctions.


ABSTRACT: Background: Thermoelectric effects result from the coupling of charge and heat transport and can be used for thermometry, cooling and harvesting of thermal energy. The microscopic origin of thermoelectric effects is a broken electron-hole symmetry, which is usually quite small in metal structures. In addition, thermoelectric effects decrease towards low temperatures, which usually makes them vanishingly small in metal nanostructures in the sub-Kelvin regime. Results: We report on a combined experimental and theoretical investigation of thermoelectric effects in superconductor/ferromagnet hybrid structures. We investigate the dependence of thermoelectric currents on the thermal excitation, as well as on the presence of a dc bias voltage across the junction. Conclusion: Large thermoelectric effects are observed in superconductor/ferromagnet and superconductor/normal-metal hybrid structures. The spin-independent signals observed under finite voltage bias are shown to be reciprocal to the physics of superconductor/normal-metal microrefrigerators. The spin-dependent thermoelectric signals in the linear regime are due to the coupling of spin and heat transport, and can be used to design more efficient refrigerators.

SUBMITTER: Kolenda S 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5238697 | biostudies-other | 2016

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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Nonlinear thermoelectric effects in high-field superconductor-ferromagnet tunnel junctions.

Kolenda Stefan S   Machon Peter P   Beckmann Detlef D   Belzig Wolfgang W  

Beilstein journal of nanotechnology 20161103


<b>Background:</b> Thermoelectric effects result from the coupling of charge and heat transport and can be used for thermometry, cooling and harvesting of thermal energy. The microscopic origin of thermoelectric effects is a broken electron-hole symmetry, which is usually quite small in metal structures. In addition, thermoelectric effects decrease towards low temperatures, which usually makes them vanishingly small in metal nanostructures in the sub-Kelvin regime. <b>Results:</b> We report on a  ...[more]

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