Thermal magnonic spin current in antiferromagnetic insulator/YIG<sup>1</sup>
· Invited
Abstract
Pure spin current phenomena and devices are recent advents. A pure spin current has the attribute of delivering spin angular momentum with a minimal of charge carriers in a metal and no carriers in an insulator. Spin pumping and thermal injection are often used with a ferromagnetic (FM) material as a spin injector. However, FM metals are plagued by numerous parasitic effects, whereas more favorable conditions are afforded in FM insulators, such as Y3Fe5O12 (YIG), with which spin injection and detection can be unequivocally revealed. It has been recently reported that spin current generated in YIG can be enhanced by one order with a 1 nm antiferromagnetic (AF) NiO layer inserted between YIG and Pt [1, 2]. The spin current enhancement shows a maximum near the Néel temperature of the NiO layer, and is proportional to the spin mixing conductance at the normal metal/YIG interface [2]. Spin backflow from the AF insulator/YIG interface has been detected using the spin Hall magnetoresistance, showing a strong temperature dependence dominated by spin conductance [3]. These results demonstrate spin transport in AF insulators is dominated by incoherent thermal magnons and spin fluctuations. Temperature dependence of spin injection and other aspects will also be discussed.
[1] H. L. Wang, C. H. Du, P. C. Hammel, and F. Y. Yang, Phys. Rev. Lett. 113, 097202 (2014).
[2] W. Lin, K. Chen, S. Zhang, and C. L. Chien. Phys. Rev. Lett. 116, 186601 (2016).
[3] W. Lin and C. L. Chien. Phys. Rev. Lett. 118, 067202 (2017).
[1] H. L. Wang, C. H. Du, P. C. Hammel, and F. Y. Yang, Phys. Rev. Lett. 113, 097202 (2014).
[2] W. Lin, K. Chen, S. Zhang, and C. L. Chien. Phys. Rev. Lett. 116, 186601 (2016).
[3] W. Lin and C. L. Chien. Phys. Rev. Lett. 118, 067202 (2017).
*1This work is in collaboration with Weiwei Lin and has been supported by DOE Office of Basic Science SC0009390 and SC0012670.
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Presenters
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Chia-Ling Chien
- Department of Physics and Astronomy, Johns Hopkins Univ
- Physics and Astronomy Department, Johns Hopkins University