Measurement of Spin-dependent Conductivity in a GaAs/AlGaAs Two-dimensional Electron Gas

ORAL

Abstract

We describe a measurement of spin-dependent electrical conductivities of a partially polarized two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG), confined at the interface of GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure and subject to an in-plane magnetic field. Our method uses polarized quantum point contacts to measure the nonequilibrium spin polarization that accompanies pure spin currents in a micron-wide channel of 2DEG. When the conductivities of spin-up and spin-down carriers are different, an unpolarized charge current that is injected into the center of the channel builds up a net spin accumulation near the injector, associated with an imbalance between the chemical potentials of the two spin populations. The chemical potential difference gives rise to a nonlocal voltage, which is then used to quantify the difference between spin-resolved conductivities.

*Work at UBC supported by NSERC, CFI, and CIFAR.

Authors

  • Seyed Hadi Ebrahimnejad Rahbari

    • University of British Columbia
  • Yuan Ren

    • UBC
    • Univ. of British Columbia
  • Sergey Frolov

    • TUD
    • Delft University of Technology
  • Joshua Folk

    • UBC
    • Univ. of British Columbia
  • Werner Wegscheider

    • ETH