207 research outputs found
Switching of Charge-Current-Induced Spin Polarization in the Topological Insulator BiSbTeSe2
The charge-current-induced spin polarization is a key property of topological
insulators for their applications in spintronics. However, topological surface
states are expected to give rise to only one type of spin polarization for a
given current direction, which has been a limiting factor for spin
manipulations. Here we report that in devices based on the bulk-insulating
topological insulator BiSbTeSe2, an unexpected switching of spin polarization
was observed upon changing the chemical potential. The spin polarization
expected from the topological surface states was detected in a heavily
electron-doped device, whereas the opposite polarization was reproducibly
observed in devices with low carrier densities. We propose that the latter type
of spin polarization stems from topologically-trivial two-dimensional states
with a large Rashba spin splitting, which are caused by a strong band bending
at the surface of BiSbTeSe2 beneath the ferromagnetic electrode used as a spin
detector. This finding paves the way for realizing the "spin transistor"
operation in future topological spintronic devices.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures (paper proper) + 3 pages, 4 figures (Supplemental
Material); rebuttal against recent criticisms towards topological-insulator
spin-detection experiments has been substantiated; accepted for publication
in PR
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