CPM Seminar
Order from Disorder: Spin and Charge Transport in Systems
with Nanoscale Random Spin-Orbit Coupling
Evgeny Sherman
Department of Physical Chemistry Universidad del Pais
Vasco
Narrow-gap semiconductors show a strong spin-orbit coupling, very sensitive
to the material structure and local defects. As a result, any local disorder
causes a variation in the spin-orbit coupling field, and a random spin-orbit
field pattern is formed. This field with the correlation length on the
order of 10 nm, strongly influences kinetic process in the two-dimensional
electron gas. We will describe main features of this field and consider
several examples, where it leads to new measurable results even if the
expectation value of the coupling vanishes.
First, we will consider spin dynamics in one-dimensional nanowires and show
that they demonstrate a very strong low-frequency spin noise due to the
randomness in the spin-orbit coupling.
Second, we discuss spin injection by periodic external electric field and
will see that the injection is efficient even if the expectation value of
the random spin-orbit field is zero.
Third, we consider spin-Hall, anomalous Hall and magnetoresistivity effects
resulting from this random field. The random spin-orbit coupling leads to
negative magnetoresistance as well as to the anisotropic conductivity with
a new mechanism due to suppression of spin-flip scattering in external
magnetic field.
References:
[1] For a review of the field: M.M. Glazov, E.Ya. Sherman, and V.K. Dugaev,
Two-dimensional electron gas with spin�orbit coupling disorder,
Physica E: Low-Dimensional Systems and Nanostructures, 42, 2157 (2010).
Thursday, May 17th 2012, 15:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, R.E. Bell Conference Room (room 103)
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