Spintronic Quantum Phase Transition in a Graphene/Pb<sub>0.24</sub>Sn<sub>0.76</sub>Te Heterostructure with Giant Rashba Spin-Orbit Coupling

ORAL

Abstract

Heterostructures of novel materials such as topological insulators and two-dimensional (2D) materials possess several unique characteristics including spin momentum locking, high spin-orbit coupling, and susceptibility to proximity effects, making them ideal for use in devices for future computing. In this work, we fabricate and measure non-local spin valves on a PST/Gr heterostructure and find spin lifetimes and spin polarization efficiencies of 300 ps and 12%, respectively. We identify a spin-split two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) at the PST/Gr interface as well as a quantum phase change occurring at 40 K. Below this transition temperature, the non-local resistance exhibits metallic behavior as the 2DEG dominates the device operation, whereas in the high-temperature regime we observe semiconducting behavior. The PST/Gr spin valve is robust, showing no signs of performance decay in ambient conditions and operating up to 500 K. Quantum phase transitions such as these could provide a low-power switching mode for novel electronic devices in future computing platforms.

Publication: DeMell et al. (2023) ArXiv:2307.1311

Presenters

  • Jennifer E DeMell

    • Laboratory for Physical Sciences

Authors

  • Jennifer E DeMell

    • Laboratory for Physical Sciences
  • Ivan I Naumov

    • Howard University
  • Gregory M Stephen

    • Laboratory for Physical Sciences
  • Nicholas A Blumenschein

    • Laboratory for Physical Sciences
  • Nicholas A Blumenschein

    • Laboratory for Physical Sciences
  • Jeremy T Robinson

    • Naval Research Laboratory
    • U.S Naval Research Laboratory
    • US Naval Research Laboratory
  • Patrick J Taylor

    • Army Research Laboratory
    • DEVCOM Army Research Laboratory
    • US Army Research Laboratory
  • Pratibha Dev

    • Howard University
  • Aubrey T Hanbicki

    • Laboratory for Physical Sciences
    • 2. Laboratory for Physical Sciences, College Park, MD
  • Adam L Friedman

    • Laboratory for Physical Sciences
    • 2. Laboratory for Physical Sciences, College Park, MD