| Literature DB >> 29467374 |
Joo-Hyeon Lee1,2, Hyung-Jun Kim1, Joonyeon Chang1, Suk Hee Han1, Hyun Cheol Koo3,4, Shehrin Sayed5, Seokmin Hong1,5, Supriyo Datta5.
Abstract
In a strong spin-orbit interaction system, the existence of three resistance states were observed when two ferromagnetic (FM) contacts were used as current terminals while a separate normal metal contact pair was used as voltage terminals. This result is strikingly different from ordinary spin valve or magnetic tunnel junction devices, which have only two resistance states corresponding to parallel (RP) and antiparallel (RAP) alignments of the FM contacts. Our experimental results on a quantum well layer with a strong Rashba effect clearly exhibit unequal antiparallel states, i.e., RAP(1) > RP > RAP(2), up to room temperature. The three-states are observed without any degradation when the distance between the non-magnetic voltage probe and the ferromagnetic current probe was increased up to 1.6 mm.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29467374 PMCID: PMC5821859 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-21760-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Separation of electrochemical potential in a Rashba system. (a) InAs quantum well structure. (b) Energy band diagram of the channel structure. (c) Fermi circles for a Rashba channel. Positive and negative propagating states are occupied according to chemical potentials μ+ and μ−, respectively. This structure in turn creates a spin potential (μ+ − μ+) proportional to the degree of spin polarization of the channel. Red and blue circles correspond to majority and minority spins, respectively. (d) Potentiometric geometry and measurement result.
Figure 2Four-terminal potentiometric measurements exhibiting charge-to-spin conversion. (a) Measurement geometry and scanning electron micrograph of device. Centre-to-centre distance L = 5.9 μm and T = 1.8 K. (b) Electrochemical potentials of the channel. The red and blue arrows indicate the directions of electrochemical potentials aligned to the FMs. (c) Potentiometric signals for positive and negative bias currents. The applied magnetic field is parallel to the Rashba field. The baseline resistance values for positive and negative currents are not identical because of a semi-tunnelling contact at the metal-semiconductor interface (Supplementary Fig. 3).
Figure 3Reciprocal measurements exhibiting spin-to-charge conversion. (a) Measurement geometry. (b) Electrochemical potentials of the channel. The red and blue arrows indicate the directions of electrochemical potentials aligned to the FMs. (c) Reciprocal signals for positive and negative bias currents. L = 5.9 μm and T = 1.8 K. (d) Reciprocal signals for L = 5.9 μm and L = 1620 μm. Note that the FMs utilized in c and d have different coercivities.
Figure 4Reciprocity of the three-terminal geometry. (a) Potentiometric signal. (b) Reciprocal signal. The results in (a) and (b) show charge-to-spin and spin-to-charge conversion signals, respectively. L = 870 μm and T = 1.8 K.
Figure 5Temperature dependence of reciprocity and spin polarization. (a,b) Temperature dependence of potentiometric signals (a) and reciprocal signals (b). Data are offset for clarity. (c) Temperature dependence of spin polarization in a channel. L = 5.9 μm. Error bars represent the standard deviation.