| Literature DB >> 27019382 |
Peng Wei1,2, Sunwoo Lee3,4, Florian Lemaitre3,5, Lucas Pinel3,5, Davide Cutaia3,6, Wujoon Cha7, Ferhat Katmis1,2, Yu Zhu3, Donald Heiman8, James Hone7, Jagadeesh S Moodera1,2, Ching-Tzu Chen3.
Abstract
Exploiting 2D materials for spintronic applications can potentially realize next-generation devices featuring low power consumption and quantum operation capability. The magnetic exchange field (MEF) induced by an adjacent magnetic insulator enables efficient control of local spin generation and spin modulation in 2D devices without compromising the delicate material structures. Using graphene as a prototypical 2D system, we demonstrate that its coupling to the model magnetic insulator (EuS) produces a substantial MEF (>14 T) with the potential to reach hundreds of tesla, which leads to orders-of-magnitude enhancement of the spin signal originating from the Zeeman spin Hall effect. Furthermore, the new ferromagnetic ground state of Dirac electrons resulting from the strong MEF may give rise to quantized spin-polarized edge transport. The MEF effect shown in our graphene/EuS devices therefore provides a key functionality for future spin logic and memory devices based on emerging 2D materials in classical and quantum information processing.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27019382 DOI: 10.1038/nmat4603
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841