| Literature DB >> 21685900 |
K Ishizaka1, M S Bahramy, H Murakawa, M Sakano, T Shimojima, T Sonobe, K Koizumi, S Shin, H Miyahara, A Kimura, K Miyamoto, T Okuda, H Namatame, M Taniguchi, R Arita, N Nagaosa, K Kobayashi, Y Murakami, R Kumai, Y Kaneko, Y Onose, Y Tokura.
Abstract
There has been increasing interest in phenomena emerging from relativistic electrons in a solid, which have a potential impact on spintronics and magnetoelectrics. One example is the Rashba effect, which lifts the electron-spin degeneracy as a consequence of spin-orbit interaction under broken inversion symmetry. A high-energy-scale Rashba spin splitting is highly desirable for enhancing the coupling between electron spins and electricity relevant for spintronic functions. Here we describe the finding of a huge spin-orbit interaction effect in a polar semiconductor composed of heavy elements, BiTeI, where the bulk carriers are ruled by large Rashba-like spin splitting. The band splitting and its spin polarization obtained by spin- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy are well in accord with relativistic first-principles calculations, confirming that the spin splitting is indeed derived from bulk atomic configurations. Together with the feasibility of carrier-doping control, the giant-Rashba semiconductor BiTeI possesses excellent potential for application to various spin-dependent electronic functions.Year: 2011 PMID: 21685900 DOI: 10.1038/nmat3051
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841