91 research outputs found
Spin transport and spin dephasing in zinc oxide
The wide bandgap semiconductor ZnO is interesting for spintronic applications
because of its small spin-orbit coupling implying a large spin coherence
length. Utilizing vertical spin valve devices with ferromagnetic electrodes
(TiN/Co/ZnO/Ni/Au), we study the spin-polarized transport across ZnO in
all-electrical experiments. The measured magnetoresistance agrees well with the
prediction of a two spin channel model with spin-dependent interface
resistance. Fitting the data yields spin diffusion lengths of 10.8nm (2K),
10.7nm (10K), and 6.2nm (200K) in ZnO, corresponding to spin lifetimes of 2.6ns
(2K), 2.0ns (10K), and 31ps (200K).Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures; supplemental material adde
Spin Hall magnetoresistance in antiferromagnet/heavy-metal heterostructures
We investigate the spin Hall magnetoresistance in thin film bilayer
heterostructures of the heavy metal Pt and the antiferromagnetic insulator NiO.
While rotating an external magnetic field in the easy plane of NiO, we record
the longitudinal and the transverse resistivity of the Pt layer and observe an
amplitude modulation consistent with the spin Hall magnetoresistance. In
comparison to Pt on collinear ferrimagnets, the modulation is phase shifted by
90{\deg} and its amplitude strongly increases with the magnitude of the
magnetic field. We explain the observed magnetic field-dependence of the spin
Hall magnetoresistance in a comprehensive model taking into account magnetic
field induced modifications of the domain structure in antiferromagnets. With
this generic model we are further able to estimate the strength of the
magnetoelastic coupling in antiferromagnets. Our detailed study shows that the
spin Hall magnetoresistance is a versatile tool to investigate the magnetic
spin structure as well as magnetoelastic effects, even in antiferromagnetic
multidomain materials
Unambiguous determination of spin dephasing times in ZnO
Time-resolved magneto-optics is a well-established optical pump probe
technique to generate and to probe spin coherence in semiconductors. By this
method, spin dephasing times T_2^* can easily be determined if their values are
comparable to the available pump-probe-delays. If T_2^* exceeds the laser
repetition time, however, resonant spin amplification (RSA) can equally be used
to extract T_2^*. We demonstrate that in ZnO these techniques have several
tripping hazards resulting in deceptive values for T_2^* and show how to avoid
them. We show that the temperature dependence of the amplitude ratio of two
separate spin species can easily be misinterpreted as a strongly temperature
dependent T_2^* of a single spin ensemble, while the two spin species have
T_2^* values which are nearly independent of temperature. Additionally,
consecutive pump pulses can significantly diminish the spin polarization, which
remains from previous pump pulses. While this barely affects T_2^* values
extracted from delay line scans, it results in seemingly shorter T_2^* values
in RSA.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figure
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