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USING SPIN IN (FUTURE) ELECTRONIC DEVICES

USING SPIN IN (FUTURE) ELECTRONIC DEVICES. Tomas Jungwirth. Universit y of Nottingham Bryan Gallagher, Kevin Edmonds Tom Foxon, Richard Campion, et al. IP ASCR, Prague Jan Mašek,Alexander Shick Jan Kučera, Franti š ek M á ca. University of Wuerzburg

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USING SPIN IN (FUTURE) ELECTRONIC DEVICES

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  1. USING SPIN IN (FUTURE) ELECTRONIC DEVICES Tomas Jungwirth University of Nottingham Bryan Gallagher, Kevin Edmonds Tom Foxon, Richard Campion, et al. IP ASCR, Prague Jan Mašek,Alexander Shick Jan Kučera, František Máca University of Wuerzburg Laurens Molenkamp, Charles Gould et al. Texas A&M Jairo Sinova, et al. University of Texas Allan MaDonald, Qian Niu, et al. Hitachi Cambridge Jorg Wunderlich, Bernd Kaestner et al.

  2. Electron has a charge (electronics) and spin (spintronics) Electrons do not actually “spin”, they produce a magnetic moment that is equivalent to an electron spinning clockwise or anti-clockwise OUTLINE - Current and future (???) spintronic devices - Challenges for spintronics  research topics - Electrical manipulation of spin in normal semiconductors (Spin Hall effect) - Ferromagnetic semiconductors - materials and devices

  3. CURRENT SPINTRONIC DEVICES

  4. HARD DISKS

  5. HARD DISK DRIVE READ HEADS spintronic read heads horse-shoe read/write heads

  6. Anisotropic magnetoresistance (AMR) read head 1992 - dawn of spintronics Ferromagnetism  large response (many spins) to small magnetic fields Spin-orbit coupling  spin response detected electrically

  7. Giant magnetoresistance (GMR) read head 1997 GMR

  8. MEMORY CHIPS .DRAM(capacitor) - high density, cheep x slow, high power, volatile .SRAM(transistors) - low power, fast x low density, expensive, volatile .Flash (floating gate) - non-volatilex slow, limited life, expensive Operation through electron chargemanipulation

  9. MRAM – universal memory (fast, small, non-volatile) Tunneling magneto-resistance effect RAM chip that won't forget ↓ instant on-and-off computers

  10. MRAM – universal memory (fast, small, non-volatile) Tunneling magneto-resistance effect RAM chip that won't forget ↓ instant on-and-off computers

  11. FUTURE (? or ???) SPINTRONIC DEVICES

  12. The power we use at home and outside of work accounts for only about a fifth of the total energy consumed in the United States every year, according to the Department of Energy. (ABCNEWS.com) Where Does All the Power Go? United States Energy Consumption: An Overview April 24 — We have electronic gizmos for just about every part of our daily lives, from brushing our teeth to staying in touch no matter where we are. Our swollen houses are stuffed with TVs, computers, and ever-larger and more complicated appliances. PROCESSORS Low-dissipation microelectronics Long spin-coherence times → information carried by spin-currents Instead of electrical currents. Functionality based on spin-dynamics, e.g., domain wall motion NOT gate Allwood et al., Science ’02

  13. QUANTUM COMPUTERS 1 0 Classical bit massive quantum parallelism Q-bit a + b

  14. CHALLENGES FOR SPINTRONICS

  15. EXANGE-BIAS FM AFM fails when scaled down to ~10 nm dimensions Look for other MR concepts

  16. EXTERNAL MAGNETIC FIELD problems with integration - extra wires, addressing neighboring bits

  17. Current (insted of magnetic field) induced switching Buhrman & Ralph, NNUN ABSTRACTS '02 Slonczewski, JMMM '96; Berger, PRB '96 Angular momentum conservation  spin-torque

  18. magnetic field current Myers et al., Science '99; PRL '02 local, reliable, but fairly large currents needed Likely the future of MRAMs

  19. INTEGRATION WITH SEMICONDUCTOR ELECTRONICS  Spin-valve transistor  Metal ferromagnet to semiconductor spin-injector  All-semiconductor spintronics - electrical manipulation of spins (no external magnetic field) - making semiconductors ferromagnetic

  20. ELECTRICAL MANIPULATION OF SPINS IN NORMAL SEMICONDUCTORS - SPIN HALL EFFECT

  21. B _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ FL + + + + + + + + + + + + + I V Ordinary Hall effect Lorentz force deflect charged-particles towards the edge Detected by measuring transverse voltage

  22. _ _ _ FSO _ non-magnetic FSO I V=0 Spin Hall effect Spin-orbit coupling “force” deflects like-spin particles Spin-current generation in non-magnetic systems without applying external magnetic fields Spin accumulation without charge accumulation excludes simple electrical detection Kato, Myars, Gossard, Awschalom, Science Wunderlich, Kaestner, Sinova, Jungwirth, PRL '04

  23. k E Beff Spin-orbit coupling (relativistic effect) Produces an electric field Ingredients: - potential V(r) - motion of an electron E In the rest frame of an electron the electric field generates and effective magnetic field - gives an effective interaction with the electron’s magnetic moment

  24. skew scattering Skew scattering off impurity potential

  25. SO-coupling from host atoms in a perfect crystal l=0 for electrons  weak SO l=1 for holes  strong SO Enhanced in asymmetric QW

  26. z-component of spin due to precession in effective "Zeeman" field Classical dynamics in k-dependent (Rashba) field: LLG equations for small drift adiabatic solution: 

  27. Conventional vertical spin-LED Novel co-planar spin-LED Y. Ohno et al.: Nature 402, 790 (1999) R. Fiederling et al.: Nature 402, 787 (1999) B. T. Jonker et al.: PRB 62, 8180 (2000) X. Jiang et al.: PRL 90, 256603 (2003) R. Wang et al.: APL 86, 052901 (2005) … ● No hetero-interface along the LED current ● Spin detection directly in the 2DHG ●Light emission near edge of the 2DHG ● 2DHG with strong and tunable SO 2DHG 2DEG Spin polarization detected through circular polarization of emitted light

  28. 2DEG VT 2DHG VD EXPERIMENT Spin Hall Effect

  29. Experiment “A” Experiment “B” Spin Hall Effect Device

  30. Experiment “A” Experiment “B” Opposite perpendicular polarization for opposite Ip currents or opposite edges  SPIN HALL EFFECT

  31. FERROMAGNETIC SEMICONDUCTORS

  32. MnGa As Ga (Ga,Mn)As diluted magnetic semiconductor Low-T MBE - random but uniform Mn distribution up to ~ 10% doping 5 d-electrons with L=0, S=5/2 moderately shallow acceptor

  33. Theoretical descriptions Microscopic: atomic orbitals & Coulomb correlation of d-electrons & hopping Jpd = +0.6 meV nm3 JpdSMn.shole Effective magnetic: Coulomb correlation of d-electrons & hoppingAF kinetic-exchange coupling

  34. Mn Mn Mn As Ga Jungwirth, Wang, et al. cond-mat/0505215 Intrinsic properties of (Ga,Mn)As: Tc linear in MnGa local moment concentration; falls rapidly with decreasing hole density in more than 50% compensated samples; nearly independent of hole density for compensation < 50%.

  35. Extrinsic effects: Interstitial Mn - a magnetism killer Mn As Interstitial Mn is detrimental to magnetic order: compensating double-donor – reduces carrier density couples antiferromagnetically to substitutional Mn even in low compensation samples  smaller effective number of Mn momentsBlinowski PRB ‘03, Mašek, Máca PRB '03 Yu et al., PRB ’02: ~10-20% of total Mn concentration is incorporated as interstitials Increased TC on annealing corresponds to removal of these defects.

  36. Tc=173K 8% Mn Tc as grown and annealed samples Open symbols as grown. Closed symbols annealed Jungwirth, Wang, et al. cond-mat/0505215

  37. High (>40%) compensation Number of holes per Mneff Tc/xeff vs p/Mneff Jungwirth, Wang, et al. cond-mat/0505215

  38. Mnsub MnInt Generation of Mnint during growth Theoretical linear dependence of Mnsub on total Mn confirmed experimentally Jungwirth, Wang, et al. cond-mat/0505215

  39. Prospects of (Ga,Mn)As based materials with room Tc - Concentration of uncompensated MnGa moments has to reach ~10% only 6.2% in the current record Tc=173K sample - Charge compensation not so important unless > 40% - No indication from theory or experiment that the problem is other than technological - better control of growth-T, stoichiometry; new growth or chemical composition strategies to incorporate more MnGa local moments or enhance p-d coupling

  40. [100] [100] [010] [100] [010] [010] Tunneling anisotropic magnetoresistance Giant magneto-resistance (Ga,Mn)As Au Au no exchange-bias needed Single magnetic layer sensor or memory Gould, Ruster, Jungwirth, et al., PRL '04

  41. Spin-orbit coupling and anisotropies M || <100> M || <111> spin-split bands at M≠0 Dietl et al., Science '00 (Abolfath, Jungwirth et al., PRB '01 • Magnetization orientation dependences • Hole total energy over Fermi volume • → magnetic anisotropy • Group velocities at the Fermi surface and density of states for scattering • → in plane magneto-resistance anisotropy • Density of states at the Fermi energy • → anisotropic tunnel magneto-resistance

  42. Current [110] GaMnAs Nanocontact TAMR 5nm thick 2% Mn GaMnAs Hall bars & nanoconstrictions 30nm Constriction 30nm constriction Tunnelling conduction at low temperatures & voltages Giddings, Khalid, Jungwirth, Sinova et al. PRL '05

  43. y jt z x y jt z x Landauer-Büttiker tunnelling probabilites Wavevector dependent tunnelling probabilityT (ky, kz) Red high T; blue low T. Magnetization perpendicular to plane Magnetization in plane Magnetisation in plane constriction: strong z-confinement (ultra-thin film) less strong y –confinement (constriction)

  44. 30nm constriction Very large TAMR in single nanocontacts 1400%

  45. AMR & TAMR 3m bar 30nm constriction B || z B || z B|| y B || y B || x B || x AMR in unstructured bar TAMR in constriction MR response of constricted device and bar are very similar in character but largely enhanced in the tunnel constriction

  46. Final remark: spintronics in footsteps of electronics Spintronic nano-transistor field-controlled MR device Spintronic wire AMR device Spintronic diode GMR, TMR, TAMR device

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