Friday, November 22, 2013

弛豫01 relaxation01 population relaxation time (T1) and the phase memory time (T2): T1 measures the lifetime of a classical bit, in this case embodied by a spin oriented either parallel or antiparallel to an external magnetic field, and

弛豫01 relaxation01

Organic semiconductors are studied intensively for applications in electronics and optics1, and even spin-based information technology, or spintronics2. Fundamental quantities in spintronics are the population relaxation time (T1) and the phase memory time (T2): T1 measures the lifetime of a classical bit, in this case embodied by a spin oriented either parallel or antiparallel to an external magnetic field, and T2 measures the corresponding lifetime of a quantum bit, encoded in the phase of the quantum state. Here we establish that these times are surprisingly long for a common, low-cost and chemically modifiable organic semiconductor, the blue pigment copper phthalocyanine3, in easily processed thin-film form of the type used for device fabrication. At 5K, a temperature reachable using inexpensive closed-cycle refrigerators, T1 and T2 are respectively 59ms and 2.6μs, and at 80K, which is just above the boiling point of liquid nitrogen, they are respectively 10μs and 1μs, demonstrating that the performance of thin-film copper phthalocyanine is superior to that of single-molecule magnets over the same temperature range4. T2 is more than two orders of magnitude greater than the duration of the spin manipulation pulses, which suggests that copper phthalocyanine holds promise for quantum information processing, and the long T1 indicates possibilities for medium-term storage of classical bits in all-organic devices on plastic substrates.

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