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Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University...

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Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd , 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich , A. Irvine, et al Institute of Physics ASCR Tomas Jungwirth , Vít Novák, et al Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control in multiband complex systems University of Würzburg Laurens Molenkamp , E. Hankiewiecz, et al University of Nottingham Bryan Gallagher , Richard Campion, et al. University of Texas Allan MacDonald , et al Spin-injection Hall Effect: a new member of the spintronics Hall family
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Page 1: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

Research fueled by:

University of TexasDecember 3rd, 2009

JAIRO SINOVATexas A&M University

Institute of Physics ASCR

Hitachi CambridgeJoerg Wünderlich, A. Irvine, et al

Institute of Physics ASCRTomas Jungwirth, Vít Novák, et al

Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control in multiband complex systems

University of Würzburg Laurens Molenkamp, E. Hankiewiecz, et al

University of Nottingham Bryan Gallagher, Richard Campion, et al.

University of TexasAllan MacDonald, et al

Spin-injection Hall Effect:a new member of the spintronics Hall family

Page 2: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

2Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

I. Technology motivation

II. Control of material and transport properties through spin-orbit coupling:I.Ferromagnetic semiconductorsII.Tunneling anisotropic magnetoresistanceIII.Anomalous Hall effect and spin-dependent Hall effects

I. Spin injection Hall effectMaking the deviceBasic observation; analogy to AHEThe effective HamiltonianSpin-charge DynamicsStrong and weak spin-orbit couple contributions of AHE

SIHE new experimental results, further checks

Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control in multiband complex

systems through spin-orbit coupling

Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control in multiband complex

systems through spin-orbit coupling

Page 3: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

3Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Circuit heat generation is one key limiting factor for scaling device speed

Industry has been successful in doubling of transistor numbers on a chip approximately every 18 months (Moore’s law). Although expected to continue for several decades several major challenges will need to be faced.

The need for basic research in technology development

Page 4: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

4Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors

Basic Research Inc.

1D systems

Single electron systems (FETs)

Spin dependent physics

Ferromagnetic transport

Molecular systems

New materials

Strongly correlated

systems

Nanoelectronics

The need for basic research in technology development

Nanoelectronics Research Initiative

SWANMIND

INDEX WIN

• Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.• IBM Corporation• Intel Corporation• MICRON Technology, Inc.• Texas Instruments Incorporated

• Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.• IBM Corporation• Intel Corporation• MICRON Technology, Inc.• Texas Instruments Incorporated

Page 5: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

5Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors 2005: EMERGING RESEARCH DEVICES

Page 6: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

6Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

I. Technology motivation

II. Control of material and transport properties through spin-orbit coupling:I.Ferromagnetic semiconductorsII.Tunneling anisotropic magnetoresistanceIII.Anomalous Hall effect and spin-dependent Hall effects

I. Spin injection Hall effectMaking the deviceBasic observation; analogy to AHEThe effective HamiltonianSpin-charge DynamicsStrong and weak spin-orbit couple contributions of AHE

SIHE new experimental results, further checks

Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control in multiband complex

systems through spin-orbit coupling

Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control in multiband complex

systems through spin-orbit coupling

Page 7: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

7Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Spin-orbit coupling interaction

(one of the few echoes of relativistic physics in the solid state)

This gives an effective interaction with the electron’s magnetic moment

Consequences•Effective quantization axis of the spin depends on the momentum of the electron. Band structure (group velocities, scattering rates, etc.) mixed strongly in multi-band systems

•If treated as scattering the electron gets asymmetrically scattered to the left or to the right depending on its “spin”

Classical explanation (in reality it is quantum mechanics + relativity )

• “Impurity” potential V(r) Producesan electric field

∇V

BBeffeff

pss

In the rest frame of an electronthe electric field generates and effective magnetic field

• Motion of an electron

Page 8: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

8Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Control of materials and transport properties via spin-orbit coupling

AsAsGaGaMnMn

New magnetic materials

Nano-transport

Spintronic Hall effects

Magneto-transport

Caloritronics

Topological transport effects

Effects of spin-orbit coupling in

multiband systems

Page 9: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

9Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Nano-transport

Spintronic Hall effects

Magneto-transport

Caloritronics

Topological transport effects

Effects of spin-orbit coupling in

multiband systems

Ferromagnetic Semiconductors

Need true FSs not FM inclusions in SCs

Mn

Ga

As

MnGaAs - standard III-V

semiconductor+

Group-II Mn - dilute magnetic moments & holes

(Ga,Mn)As - ferromagnetic semiconductor

Control of materials and transport properties via spin-orbit coupling

Page 10: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

10Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

AsAsGaGaMnMn

New magnetic materials

Nano-transport

Spintronic Hall effects

Magneto-transport

Caloritronics

Topological transport effects

Effects of spin-orbit coupling in

multiband systems

Transition to a ferromagnet when Mn concentration > 1.5-2 %

DO

S

spin ↓

spin ↑

valence band As-p-like holes

Mn

Ga

AsMn

>2% Mn

EF

ferromagnetism onset near MIT when

localization length is longer than Mn-Mn spacing. Zener type

model

Control of materials and transport properties via spin-orbit coupling

Jungwirth, Sinova, et al RMP 06

Page 11: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

11Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

AsAsGaGaMnMn

New magnetic materials

Nano-transport

Spintronic Hall effects

Magneto-transport

Caloritronics

Topological transport effects

Effects of spin-orbit coupling in

multiband systems

Transition to a ferromagnet when Mn concentration increases

DO

S

spin ↓

spin ↑

valence band As-p-like holes

Mn

Ga

AsMn

>2% Mn

EF

ferromagnetism onset near MIT when

localization length is longer than Mn-Mn spacing. Zener type

model

Mn

Ga

As Mn

Ferromagnetic Ga1-xMnxAs x>1.5%

Ferromagnetism mediated by delocalized band states: •polarized carriers with large spin-orbit coupling

px

py

∇V

HHsoso

pssMany useful properties

•FM dependence on doping•Low saturation magnetization

What are the consequences of the strong spin-orbit coupling of the carriers “gluing” the localized Mn moments ?

Control of materials and transport properties via spin-orbit coupling

Page 12: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

12

Effects of spin-orbit coupling in multiband

systems

Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

AsAsGaGaMnMn

New magnetic materials

Nano-transport

Spintronic Hall effects

Magneto-transport

Caloritronics

Topological transport effects

Effects of spin-orbit coupling in

multiband systems

Mn

Ga

As Mn

Ferromagnetic Ga1-xMnxAs x>1.5%

Ferromagnetism mediated by delocalized band states: •polarized carriers with large spin-orbit coupling

px

py

∇V

HHsoso

pss

What are the consequences of the strong spin-orbit coupling of the carriers “gluing” the localized Mn moments ?

Many useful properties•FM dependence on doping•Low saturation magnetization

Control of magnetic anisotropy

Strain & SO ↓

Strain induces changes in the band structure and, in turn, change the ferromagnetic easy axis. Piezoelectric devices: fast magnetization switching Wunderlich, Sinova, et al PRB 06

Tensile strain Compressive strain

M→

M→

Control of materials and transport properties via spin-orbit coupling

Page 13: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

13

Effects of spin-orbit coupling in multiband

systems

Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

AsAsGaGaMnMn

New magnetic materials

Nano-transport

Spintronic Hall effects

Magneto-transport

Caloritronics

Topological transport effects

Magneto-transport in GaMnAs

G(T)MR~ 100% MR effect

Control of materials and transport properties via spin-orbit coupling

Fert, Grunberg et al. 1988

Page 14: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

14Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

AsAsGaGaMnMn

New magnetic materials

Nano-transport

Spintronic Hall effects

Magneto-transport

Caloritronics

Topological transport effects

Effects of spin-orbit coupling in

multiband systems

Magneto-transport in GaMnAs

G(T)MR~ 100% MR effect

Control of materials and transport properties via spin-orbit coupling

Exchange split bands:σ~ TDOS(↑↓) < TDOS(↑↑)

Fert, Grunberg et al. 1988

Page 15: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

15Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

AsAsGaGaMnMn

New magnetic materials

Nano-transport

Spintronic Hall effects

Magneto-transport

Caloritronics

Topological transport effects

Effects of spin-orbit coupling in

multiband systems

Magneto-transport in GaMnAs

TMR ~ 100% MR effect

Control of materials and transport properties via spin-orbit coupling

Exchange split bands:σ~ TDOS(↑↓) < TDOS(↑↑)

TAMR

Tunneling Anisotropic Magnetoresistance

discovered in (Ga,Mn)As

Gold et al. PRL’04

Au

σ ~ TDOS (M)→

TAMR can be enormous depending on doping

Now discovered in FM metals !!

Ruster, JS, et al PRL05

Page 16: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

16Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

AsAsGaGaMnMn

New magnetic materials

Nano-transport

Spintronic Hall effects

Magneto-transport

Caloritronics

Topological transport effects

Effects of spin-orbit coupling in

multiband systems

Control of materials and transport properties via spin-orbit coupling

Magneto-transport in GaMnAs

TAMR

Tunneling Anisotropic Magnetoresistance

discovered in (Ga,Mn)As

Gold et al. PRL’04

Au

σ ~ TDOS (M)→

TAMR can be enormous depending on doping

Ruster, JS, et al PRL05

Now discovered in FM metals !!

Page 17: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

17Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Effects of spin-orbit coupling in

multiband systems

AsAsGaGaMnMn

New magnetic materials

Nano-transport

Spintronic Hall effects

Magneto-transport

Caloritronics

Topological transport effects

Control of materials and transport properties via spin-orbit coupling

Page 18: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

18Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Effects of spin-orbit coupling in

multiband systems

AsAsGaGaMnMn

New magnetic materials

Nano-transport

Spintronic Hall effects

Magneto-transport

Caloritronics

Topological transport effects

Control of materials and transport properties via spin-orbit coupling

Anomalous Hall effects

I

FSO

FSO

majority

minority

V

Nagaosa, Sinova, Onoda, MacDonald, Ong, RMP 10

Page 19: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

19Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Simple electrical measurement of out of plane magnetization

InMnAs

Spin dependent “force” deflects like-spin particles

ρH=R0B ┴ +4π RsM┴

Anomalous Hall Effect: the basics

I

_ FSO

FSO

_ __

majority

minority

V

Page 20: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

20Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Cartoon of the mechanisms contributing to AHEindependent of impurity density

Electrons have an “anomalous” velocity perpendicular to the electric field related to their Berry’s phase curvature which is nonzero when they have spin-orbit coupling.

Electrons deflect to the right or to the left as they are accelerated by an electric field ONLY because of the spin-orbit coupling in the periodic potential (electronics structure)

E

SO coupled quasiparticles

Intrinsic deflection B

Electrons deflect first to one side due to the field created by the impurity and deflect back when they leave the impurity since the field is opposite resulting in a side step. They however come out in a different band so this gives rise to an anomalous velocity through scattering rates times side jump.

independent of impurity density

Side jump scatteringVimp(r) (Δso>ħ/τ) ∝ λ*∇Vimp(r) (Δso<ħ/τ)

B

Skew scattering

Asymmetric scattering due to the spin-orbit coupling of the electron or the impurity. Known as Mott scattering.

~σ~1/niVimp(r) (Δso>ħ/τ) ∝ λ*∇Vimp(r) (Δso<ħ/τ) A

Page 21: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

21Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Contributions understood in simple metallic 2D models

Semi-classical approach:Gauge invariant formulation

Sinitsyn, Sinvoa, et al PRB 05, PRL 06, PRB 07

Kubo microscopic approach:in agreement with semiclassical

Borunda, Sinova, et al PRL 07, Nunner, JS, et al PRB 08

Non-Equilibrium Green’s Function (NEGF) microscopic approach

Kovalev, Sinova et al PRB 08, Onoda PRL 06, PRB 08

Page 22: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

22Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Review of AHE (to appear in RMP 2010), Nagaosa, Sinova, Onoda, MacDonald, Ong

Phenomenological scaling regimes of AHE

Scattering independent regime

Q: is the scattering independent regime dominated by the intrinsic AHE?

1. A high conductivity regime for σxx>106 (Ωcm)-1 in which AHE is skew dominated2. A good metal regime for σxx ~104-106 (Ωcm) -1 in which σxy

AH~ const3. A bad metal/hopping regime for σxx<104 (Ωcm) -1 for which σxy

AH~ σxyα with α>1

Skew dominated regime

Page 23: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

23Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

n, q

n’≠n, q

Intrinsic AHE approach in comparing to experiment: phenomenological “proof”

•DMS systems (Jungwirth et al PRL 2002, Jungwirth, Sinova, et al APL 03)

•layered 2D ferromagnets e.g. SrRuO3 ferromagnets (Taguchi et al, Science 01, Fang et al, Science 03)

•CuCrSeBr compounds ( Lee et al, Science 04)

•Fe (Yao et al PRL 04) Experiment: σAH 1000 (Ω cm)∼ -1

Theory: σAH 750 (Ω cm)∼ -1

AHE in Fe

AHE in GaMnAs

Page 24: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

24Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Valenzuela et al Nature 06

Inverse SHE

Anomalous Hall effect: more than meets the eye

Wunderlich, Kaestner, Sinova, Jungwirth PRL 04

Kato et al Science 03

IntrinsicExtrinsic

V

Mesoscopic Spin Hall Effect

Intrinsic

Brune,Roth, Hankiewicz, Sinova, Molenkamp, et al 09

Wunderlich, Irvine, Sinova, Jungwirth, et al, Nature Physics 09

Spin-injection Hall Effect

Anomalous Hall Effect

I

_ FS

OFS

O

_ _majority

minority

V

Spin Hall Effect

I

_ FS

OFS

O

_ _

V

Page 25: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

25Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

I. Technology motivation

II. Control of material and transport properties through spin-orbit coupling:I.Ferromagnetic semiconductorsII.Tunneling anisotropic magnetoresistanceIII.Anomalous Hall effect and spin-dependent Hall effects

I. Spin injection Hall effectMaking the deviceBasic observation; analogy to AHEThe effective HamiltonianSpin-charge DynamicsStrong and weak spin-orbit couple contributions of AHE

SIHE new experimental results, further checks

Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control in multiband complex

systems through spin-orbit coupling

Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control in multiband complex

systems through spin-orbit coupling

Page 26: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

26Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Can we achieve direct spin polarization injection, detection, and manipulation by electrical means in an all paramagnetic semiconductor system?

Long standing paradigm: Datta-Das FET

Unfortunately it has not worked :•no reliable detection of spin-polarization in a diagonal transport configuration •No long spin-coherence in a Rashba spin-orbit coupled system (Dyakonov-Perel mechanism)

Towards a realistic spin-based non-magnetic FET device

Page 27: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

27Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Problem: Rashba SO coupling in the Datta-Das SFET is used for manipulation of spin (precession) BUT it dephases the spin too quickly (DP mechanism).

New paradigm using SO coupling: SO not so bad for dephasing

1) Can we use SO coupling to manipulate spin AND increase spin-coherence?

• Can we detect the spin in a non-destructive way electrically?

Use the persistent spin-Helix state and control of SO coupling strength(Bernevig et al 06, Weber et al 07, Wünderlich et al 09)

Use AHE to measure injected current polarization at the nano-scale electrically (Wünderlich, et al 09, 04)

Page 28: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

i pn

2DHG

Device schematic - materialmaterial

Page 29: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

-

2DHGi p

n

Device schematic - trenchtrench

Page 30: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

i

p

n2DHG

2DEG

Device schematic – n-etchn-etch

Page 31: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

Vd

VH

2DHG

2DEG

Vs

22

Device schematic – Hall measurementHall measurement

Page 32: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

32Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

2DHG

2DEG

e

h

ee

ee

e

hhh

h h

Vs

Vd

VH

Spin-injection Hall effect device schematics

Page 33: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

33Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Spin-injection Hall device measurements

trans. signal

σσooσσ++σσ-- σσoo

VL

Page 34: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

34Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Spin-injection Hall device measurements

trans. signal

σσooσσ++σσ-- σσoo

VL

SIHE ↔ Anomalous Hall

Local Hall voltage changes sign and magnitude along a channel of 6 μm

Page 35: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

35Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Spin-dynamics in 2D electron gas with Rashba and Dresselhauss SO coupling

a 2DEG is well described by the effective Hamiltonian:

Something interesting occurs when

• spin along the [110] direction is conserved• long lived precessing spin wave for spin perpendicular to [110]The nesting property of the Fermi surface:

Bernevig et al PRL 06, Weber et al. PRL 07

Schliemann et al PRL 04

Page 36: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

The long lived spin-excitation: “spin-helix”

An exact SU(2) symmetry

Only Sz, zero wavevector U(1) symmetry previously known:

J. Schliemann, J. C. Egues, and D. Loss, Phys. Rev. Lett. 90, 146801 (2003).

K. C. Hall et. al., Appl. Phys. Lett 83, 2937 (2003).

• Finite wave-vector spin components

• Shifting property essential

30

Page 37: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

37Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Effects of Rashba and Dresselhaus SO coupling

α= -β

[110]

[110]_

ky [010]

kx [100]

α > 0, β = 0[110]

[110]_

ky [010]

kx [100]

α = 0, β < 0[110]

[110]_

ky [010]

kx [100]

Page 38: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

38Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Spin-dynamics in 2D systems with Rashba and Dresselhauss SO coupling

For the same distance traveled along [1-10], the spin precesses by exactly the same angle.

[110]

[110]_

[110]_

Page 39: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling 33

Persistent state spin helix verified by pump-probe experiments

Similar wafer parameters to ours

Page 40: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

The Spin-Charge Drift-Diffusion Transport Equations

For arbitrary α,β spin-charge transport equation is obtained for diffusive regime

For propagation on [1-10], the equations decouple in two blocks. Focus on the one coupling Sx+ and Sz:

For Dresselhauss = 0, the equations reduce to Burkov, Nunez and MacDonald, PRB 70, 155308 (2004);

Mishchenko, Shytov, Halperin, PRL 93, 226602 (2004)

34

Page 41: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

41Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Spatial variation scale consistent with the one observed in SIHE

Spin-helix state when α ≠ β

Wunderlich, Irvine, Sinova, Jungwirth, et al, Nature Physics 09

Page 42: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

42Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Type (i) contribution much smaller in the weak SO coupled regime where the SO-coupled bands are not resolved, dominant contribution from type (ii)

Crepieux et al PRB 01Nozier et al J. Phys. 79

Two types of contributions: i)S.O. from band structure interacting with the field (external and internal)•Bloch electrons interacting with S.O. part of the disorder

Lower bound estimate of skew scatt. contribution

AHE contribution to Spin-injection Hall effect

Wunderlich, Irvine, Sinova, Jungwirth, et al, Nature Physics 09

Page 43: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

43Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Local spin-polarization → calculation of AHE signal

Weak SO coupling regime → extrinsic skew-scattering term is dominant

Lower bound estimate

Spin-injection Hall effect: theoretical expectations

Page 44: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

44Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

I. Role of basic research in technology development

II. Control of material and transport properties through spin-orbit coupling:I.Ferromagnetic semiconductorsII.Tunneling anisotropic magnetoresistanceIII.Anomalous Hall effect and spin-dependent Hall effects

I. Spin injection Hall effectMaking the deviceBasic observation; analogy to AHEThe effective HamiltonianSpin-charge DynamicsStrong and weak spin-orbit couple contributions of AHE

SIHE new experimental results, further checks

Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control in multiband complex

systems through spin-orbit coupling

Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control in multiband complex

systems through spin-orbit coupling

Page 45: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

45Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Further experimental tests of the observed SIHE

Page 46: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

46Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Non public slides deleted. Please contact

Sinova if interested

Page 47: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

47Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Non public slides deleted. Please contact

Sinova if interested

Page 48: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Semiclassical Monte Carlo of SIHE

Numerical solution of Boltzmann equation

Spin-independent scattering: Spin-dependent scattering:

•phonons,•remote impurities,•interface roughness, etc.

•side-jump, skew scattering.

AHE

•Realistic system sizes (μm).•Less computationally intensive than other methods (e.g. NEGF).

Page 49: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Single Particle Monte Carlo

Spin-Dependent Semiclassical Monte CarloTemperature effects, disorder, nonlinear effects, transient regimes.Transparent inclusion of relevant microscopic mechanisms affecting spin transport (impurities, phonons, AHE contributions, etc.).Less computationally intensive than other methods(NEGF).Realistic size devices.

Page 50: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Effects of B field: current set-up

In-Plane magnetic fieldOut-of plane magnetic field

Page 51: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

S. Datta, B. Das,Appl. Phys. Lett. 56 665 (1990).

… works only

- if channel is 1dimensional

- or under Spin Helix conditions for 2D channel

Comment 1: Datta-Das type of device

Page 52: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Page 53: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

The family of spintronic Hall effects

AHEB=0

polarized charge current gives

charge-spin currentElectrical detection

SHEB=0

charge current gives

spin current

Optical detection

SHE-1

B=0spin current gives

charge current

Electrical detection

js–––––––––––

+ + + + + + + + + +iSHE

I

_ FSO

FSO

_ __majority

minority

V

Page 54: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

The family of spintronics Hall effects

SHE-1

B=0spin current gives

charge current

Electrical detection

AHEB=0

polarized charge current gives

charge-spin currentElectrical detection

SHEB=0charge current gives

spin current

Optical detection

SIHEB=0

Optical injected polarized current

gives charge current

Electrical detection

Page 55: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

55Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Summary of spin-injection Hall effect

Basic studies of spin-charge dynamics and Hall effect in non-magnetic systems with SO coupling Spin-photovoltaic cell: solid state polarimeter on a semiconductor chip requiring no magnetic elements, external magnetic field, or bias

SIHE can be tuned electrically by external gate and combined with electrical spin-injection from a ferromagnet (e.g. Fe/Ga(Mn)As structures)

Page 56: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

56Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

A question from Natasha

Dear Professor Sinova,          My name is Natasha, and I am a middle school student. Thank you for taking the time to read this email. I read the article, "New Technology May Cool The Laptop" on www.sciencedaily.com, and it mentioned your name. I was wondering if you could answer a few questions: 1. When it says you use the electrons to process information, what type of information are you referring to?(i.e. emails, documents, etc.) 2. Does it matter what type of laptop your device is used on? Thank you again,Natasha

Page 57: Research fueled by: University of Texas December 3 rd, 2009 JAIRO SINOVA Texas A&M University Institute of Physics ASCR Hitachi Cambridge Joerg W ü nderlich,

57Nanoelectronics, spintronics, and materials control by spin-orbit coupling

Allan MacDonald U of Texas

Tomas JungwirthTexas A&M U.

Inst. of Phys. ASCRU. of Nottingham

Joerg WunderlichCambridge-Hitachi

Laurens MolenkampWürzburg

Xiong-Jun LiuTexas A&M U.

Mario BorundaTexas A&M Univ.

Harvard Univ.

Nikolai SinitsynTexas A&M U.

U. of TexasLANL

Alexey KovalevTexas A&M U.

UCLA

Liviu ZarboTexas A&M Univ.

Xin LiuTexas A&M U.

Ewelina Hankiewicz(Texas A&M Univ.)

Würzburg University

Sinova’s group

Principal Collaborators

Gerrit BauerTU Delft

Bryan GallagherU. of Nottingham

and many others


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