39 research outputs found
Fabrication and Characterization of Modulation-Doped ZnSe/(Zn,Cd)Se (110) Quantum Wells: A New System for Spin Coherence Studies
We describe the growth of modulation-doped ZnSe/(Zn,Cd)Se quantum wells on
(110) GaAs substrates. Unlike the well-known protocol for the epitaxy of
ZnSe-based quantum structures on (001) GaAs, we find that the fabrication of
quantum well structures on (110) GaAs requires significantly different growth
conditions and sample architecture. We use magnetotransport measurements to
confirm the formation of a two-dimensional electron gas in these samples, and
then measure transverse electron spin relaxation times using time-resolved
Faraday rotation. In contrast to expectations based upon known spin relaxation
mechanisms, we find surprisingly little difference between the spin lifetimes
in these (110)-oriented samples in comparison with (100)-oriented control
samples.Comment: To appear in Journal of Superconductivity (Proceedings of 3rd
Conference on Physics and Applications of Spin-dependent Phenomena in
Semiconductors
Ferromagnetic imprinting of spin polarization in a semiconductor
We present a theory of the imprinting of the electron spin coherence and
population in an n-doped semiconductor which forms a junction with a
ferromagnet. The reflection of non-equilibrium semiconductor electrons at the
interface provides a mechanism to manipulate the spin polarization vector. In
the case of unpolarized excitation, this ballistic effect produces spontaneous
electron spin coherence and nuclear polarization in the semiconductor, as
recently observed by time-resolved Faraday rotation experiments. We investigate
the dependence of the spin reflection on the Schottky barrier height and the
doping concentration in the semiconductor and suggest control mechanisms for
possible device applications.Comment: 4 pages with 2 figure
Electron Spin Injection at a Schottky Contact
We investigate theoretically electrical spin injection at a Schottky contact
between a spin-polarized electrode and a non-magnetic semiconductor. Current
and electron density spin-polarizations are discussed as functions of barrier
energy and semiconductor doping density. The effect of a spin-dependent
interface resistance that results from a tunneling region at the
contact/semiconductor interface is described. The model can serve as a guide
for designing spin-injection experiments with regard to the interface
properties and device structure.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Spin Precession and Oscillations in Mesoscopic Systems
We compare and contrast magneto-transport oscillations in the fully quantum
(single-electron coherent) and classical limits for a simple but illustrative
model. In particular, we study the induced magnetization and spin current in a
two-terminal double-barrier structure with an applied Zeeman field between the
barriers and spin disequilibrium in the contacts. Classically, the spin current
shows strong tunneling resonances due to spin precession in the region between
the two barriers. However, these oscillations are distinguishable from those in
the fully coherent case, for which a proper treatment of the electron phase is
required. We explain the differences in terms of the presence or absence of
coherent multiple wave reflections.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Electric-field dependent spin diffusion and spin injection into semiconductors
We derive a drift-diffusion equation for spin polarization in semiconductors
by consistently taking into account electric-field effects and nondegenerate
electron statistics. We identify a high-field diffusive regime which has no
analogue in metals. In this regime there are two distinct spin diffusion
lengths. Furthermore, spin injection from a ferromagnetic metal into a
semiconductor is enhanced by several orders of magnitude and spins can be
transported over distances much greater than the low-field spin diffusion
length.Comment: 5 pages, 3 eps figure
Spin diffusion and injection in semiconductor structures: Electric field effects
In semiconductor spintronic devices, the semiconductor is usually lightly
doped and nondegenerate, and moderate electric fields can dominate the carrier
motion. We recently derived a drift-diffusion equation for spin polarization in
the semiconductors by consistently taking into account electric-field effects
and nondegenerate electron statistics and identified a high-field diffusive
regime which has no analogue in metals. Here spin injection from a ferromagnet
(FM) into a nonmagnetic semiconductor (NS) is extensively studied by applying
this spin drift-diffusion equation to several typical injection structures such
as FM/NS, FM/NS/FM, and FM/NS/NS structures. We find that in the high-field
regime spin injection from a ferromagnet into a semiconductor is enhanced by
several orders of magnitude. For injection structures with interfacial
barriers, the electric field further enhances spin injection considerably. In
FM/NS/FM structures high electric fields destroy the symmetry between the two
magnets at low fields, where both magnets are equally important for spin
injection, and spin injection becomes locally determined by the magnet from
which carriers flow into the semiconductor. The field-induced spin injection
enhancement should also be insensitive to the presence of a highly doped
nonmagnetic semiconductor (NS) at the FM interface, thus FM/NS/NS
structures should also manifest efficient spin injection at high fields.
Furthermore, high fields substantially reduce the magnetoresistance observable
in a recent experiment on spin injection from magnetic semiconductors
Optical Pumping in Ferromagnet-Semiconductor Heterostructures: Magneto-optics and Spin Transport
Epitaxial ferromagnetic metal - semiconductor heterostructures are
investigated using polarization-dependent electroabsorption measurements on
GaAs p-type and n-type Schottky diodes with embedded In1-xGaxAs quantum wells.
We have conducted studies as a function of photon energy, bias voltage,
magnetic field, and excitation geometry. For optical pumping with circularly
polarized light at energies above the band edge of GaAs, photocurrents with
spin polarizations on the order of 1 % flow from the semiconductor to the
ferromagnet under reverse bias. For optical pumping at normal incidence, this
polarization may be enhanced significantly by resonant excitation at the
quantum well ground-state. Measurements in a side-pumping geometry, in which
the ferromagnet can be saturated in very low magnetic fields, show hysteresis
that is also consistent with spin-dependent transport. Magneto-optical effects
that influence these measurements are discussed.Comment: PDF, 4 figures, 1 tabl
Spin oscillations in transient diffusion of a spin pulse in n-type semiconductor quantum wells
By studying the time and spatial evolution of a pulse of the spin
polarization in -type semiconductor quantum wells, we highlight the
importance of the off-diagonal spin coherence in spin diffusion and transport.
Spin oscillations and spin polarization reverse along the the direction of spin
diffusion in the absence of the applied magnetic field are predicted from our
investigation.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in PR
Anomalous Hall effect in ferromagnetic semiconductors
We present a theory of the anomalous Hall effect in ferromagnetic (Mn,III)V
semiconductors. Our theory relates the anomalous Hall conductance of a
homogeneous ferromagnet to the Berry phase acquired by a quasiparticle
wavefunction upon traversing closed paths on the spin-split Fermi surface of a
ferromagnetic state. It can be applied equally well to any itinerant electron
ferromagnet. The quantitative agreement between our theory and experimental
data in both (In,Mn)As and (Ga,Mn)As systems suggests that this disorder
independent contribution to the anomalous Hall conductivity dominates in
diluted magnetic semiconductors.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure