7 research outputs found

    Closed-form weak localization magnetoconductivity in quantum wells with arbitrary Rashba and Dresselhaus spin-orbit interactions

    Full text link
    We derive a closed-form expression for the weak localization (WL) corrections to the magnetoconductivity of a 2D electron system with arbitrary Rashba α\alpha and Dresselhaus β\beta (linear) and β3\beta_3 (cubic) spin-orbit interaction couplings, in a perpendicular magnetic field geometry. In a system of reference with an in-plane z^\hat{z} axis chosen as the high spin-symmetry direction at α=β\alpha = \beta, we formulate a new algorithm to calculate the three independent contributions that lead to WL. The antilocalization is counterbalanced by the term associated with the spin-relaxation along z^\hat{z}, dependent only on αβ\alpha - \beta. The other term is generated by two identical scattering modes characterized by spin-relaxation rates which are explicit functions of the orientation of the scattered momentum. Excellent agreement is found with data from GaAs quantum wells, where in particular our theory correctly captures the shift of the minima of the WL curves as a function of α/β\alpha/\beta. This suggests that the anisotropy of the effective spin relaxation rates is fundamental to understanding the effect of the SO coupling in transport.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure

    Stretchable persistent spin helices in GaAs quantum wells

    Get PDF
    The Rashba and Dresselhaus spin-orbit (SO) interactions in 2D electron gases act as effective magnetic fields with momentum-dependent directions, which cause spin decay as the spins undergo arbitrary precessions about these randomly-oriented SO fields due to momentum scattering. Theoretically and experimentally, it has been established that by fine-tuning the Rashba α\alpha and Dresselhaus β\beta couplings to equal fixed\it{fixed} strengths α=β\alpha=\beta, the total SO field becomes unidirectional thus rendering the electron spins immune to dephasing due to momentum scattering. A robust persistent spin helix (PSH) has already been experimentally realized at this singular point α=β\alpha=\beta. Here we employ the suppression of weak antilocalization as a sensitive detector for matched SO fields together with a technique that allows for independent electrical control over the SO couplings via top gate voltage VTV_T and back gate voltage VBV_B. We demonstrate for the first time the gate control of β\beta and the continuouslocking\it{continuous\,locking} of the SO fields at α=β\alpha=\beta, i.e., we are able to vary both α\alpha and β\beta controllably and continuously with VTV_T and VBV_B, while keeping them locked at equal strengths. This makes possible a new concept: "stretchable PSHs", i.e., helical spin patterns with continuously variable pitches PP over a wide parameter range. The extracted spin-diffusion lengths and decay times as a function of α/β\alpha/\beta show a significant enhancement near α/β=1\alpha/\beta=1. Since within the continuous-locking regime quantum transport is diffusive (2D) for charge while ballistic (1D) for spin and thus amenable to coherent spin control, stretchable PSHs could provide the platform for the much heralded long-distance communication 825\sim 8 - 25 μ\mum between solid-state spin qubits.Comment: 5 color figures, with supplementary info available on arXiv. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1403.351

    Template-Assisted Scalable Nanowire Networks

    Get PDF
    This is an open access article published under an ACS AuthorChoice License. See Standard ACS AuthorChoice/Editors' Choice Usage Agreement - https://pubs.acs.org/page/policy/authorchoice_termsofuse.htmlTopological qubits based on Majorana Fermions have the potential to revolutionize the emerging field of quantum computing by making information processing significantly more robust to decoherence. Nanowires are a promising medium for hosting these kinds of qubits, though branched nanowires are needed to perform qubit manipulations. Here we report a gold-free templated growth of III-V nanowires by molecular beam epitaxy using an approach that enables patternable and highly regular branched nanowire arrays on a far greater scale than what has been reported thus far. Our approach relies on the lattice-mismatched growth of InAs on top of defect-free GaAs nanomembranes yielding laterally oriented, low-defect InAs and InGaAs nanowires whose shapes are determined by surface and strain energy minimization. By controlling nanomembrane width and growth time, we demonstrate the formation of compositionally graded nanowires with cross-sections less than 50 nm. Scaling the nanowires below 20 nm leads to the formation of homogeneous InGaAs nanowires, which exhibit phase-coherent, quasi-1D quantum transport as shown by magnetoconductance measurements. These results are an important advance toward scalable topological quantum computing

    Symmetry breaking of the persistent spin helix in quantum transport

    No full text
    We exploit the high-symmetry persistent spin helix state obtained for similar Rashba and linear Dresselhaus interactions in a quantum well to revisit the weak localization problem within a perturbative approach in a Landau level formulation. We define the small parameter of the theory as the deviation from the symmetry state introduced by the mismatch of the linear terms and by the strength of the cubic Dresselhaus term. In the vicinity of the helix state, the SO field becomes uniaxial, offering a natural direction of spin quantization, thus defining the z axis within the 2D plane. In contrast to previous theories, this reveals a full decoupling of the Cooperon triplet scattering modes as well as decoupled Landau levels, to lowest order in the small parameter. This makes it possible to derive a closed-form expression for the weak localization magnetoconductivity, thus providing a new paradigm of localization in the weakly-broken spin symmetry regime. We perform quantum transport experiments in GaAs quantum wells, finding very good agreement with the new theory. We present a reliable two-step method to extract the SO and transport parameters from fits of the new expression, obtaining excellen tagreement with recent experiments. This is an important step towards engineering and controlling the spin-orbit interaction as a powerful resource in emerging quantum technologies
    corecore