Spin Control Without Magnetic Fields
Researchers from the Nanodevices Group at CIC nanoGUNE demonstrate that they can control the polarization direction of a spin current without having to apply a magnetic field, which could aid in implementing energy-efficient spintronics devices. The work has been published in Physical Review Letters.
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In graphene, spin currents can live much longer than they can in other materials, making the material an ideal platform for future spintronic devices. But there is a problem: To manipulate graphene’s spin currents, researchers need to apply a magnetic field to the material. The necessary hardware is difficult to integrate into circuits, limiting how small graphene-based spin devices could be shrunk. Now Josep Ingla-Aynés of CIC nanoGUNE and colleagues have demonstrated a method to manipulate—at room temperature—graphene spin currents using only electric fields.
The team transferred a sheet of tungsten diselenide (WSe2) on a sheet of bilayer graphene and heated the two materials to bond them together. Then they patterned the structure with a series of electrodes, which they used to apply an in-plane electric field, a gate voltage, and to inject into the graphene a spin current. Experiments were performed at 50 K and at room temperature.
At both temperatures, the team observed that they could switch the polarization direction of the spin current by changing the magnitude of both the in-plane electric field and the gate voltage. They say that the control comes from the presence of spin-orbit coupling in the WSe2 layer. This effect produces an effective magnetic field in the graphene that is sufficient to change the spin angle.
Ingla-Aynés says that the demonstration represents a room-temperature version of the long sought-after “Datta Das” spin transistor. The Datta Das spin transistor is a device whose electrical resistance can be switched from high to low by changing the polarization direction of the spin current. Such devices have been realized at low temperatures using two-dimensional electron gases (2DEGs) but not at higher temperatures.
Source: Physics
Electrical control of valley-Zeeman spin-orbit-coupling--induced spin precession at room temperature
Physical Review Letters (Vol. 127, No. 4):