| Literature DB >> 27571452 |
E Lesne1, Yu Fu2, S Oyarzun2,3, J C Rojas-Sánchez1, D C Vaz1, H Naganuma1,4, G Sicoli5, J-P Attané2, M Jamet2, E Jacquet1, J-M George1, A Barthélémy1, H Jaffrès1, A Fert1, M Bibes1, L Vila2.
Abstract
The spin-orbit interaction couples the electrons' motion to their spin. As a result, a charge current running through a material with strong spin-orbit coupling generates a transverse spin current (spin Hall effect, SHE) and vice versa (inverse spin Hall effect, ISHE). The emergence of SHE and ISHE as charge-to-spin interconversion mechanisms offers a variety of novel spintronic functionalities and devices, some of which do not require any ferromagnetic material. However, the interconversion efficiency of SHE and ISHE (spin Hall angle) is a bulk property that rarely exceeds ten percent, and does not take advantage of interfacial and low-dimensional effects otherwise ubiquitous in spintronic hetero- and mesostructures. Here, we make use of an interface-driven spin-orbit coupling mechanism-the Rashba effect-in the oxide two-dimensional electron system (2DES) LaAlO3/SrTiO3 to achieve spin-to-charge conversion with unprecedented efficiency. Through spin pumping, we inject a spin current from a NiFe film into the oxide 2DES and detect the resulting charge current, which can be strongly modulated by a gate voltage. We discuss the amplitude of the effect and its gate dependence on the basis of the electronic structure of the 2DES and highlight the importance of a long scattering time to achieve efficient spin-to-charge interconversion.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27571452 DOI: 10.1038/nmat4726
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841