1 research outputs found
Room Temperature Electrical Detection of Spin Polarized Currents in Topological Insulators
Topological insulators (TIs) are
a new class of quantum materials that exhibit a current-induced spin
polarization due to spin-momentum locking of massless Dirac Fermions
in their surface states. This helical spin polarization in three-dimensional
(3D) TIs has been observed using photoemission spectroscopy up to
room temperatures. Recently, spin polarized surface currents in 3D
TIs were detected electrically by potentiometric measurements using
ferromagnetic detector contacts. However, these electric measurements
are so far limited to cryogenic temperatures. Here we report the room
temperature electrical detection of the spin polarization on the surface
of Bi<sub>2</sub>Se<sub>3</sub> by employing spin sensitive ferromagnetic
tunnel contacts. The current-induced spin polarization on the Bi<sub>2</sub>Se<sub>3</sub> surface is probed by measuring the magnetoresistance
while switching the magnetization direction of the ferromagnetic detector.
A spin resistance of up to 70 mΩ is measured at room temperature,
which increases linearly with current bias, reverses sign with current
direction, and decreases with higher TI thickness. The magnitude of
the spin signal, its sign, and control experiments, using different
measurement geometries and interface conditions, rule out other known
physical effects. These findings provide further information about
the electrical detection of current-induced spin polarizations in
3D TIs at ambient temperatures and could lead to innovative spin-based
technologies