The discovery of novel properties, effects or microscopic mechanisms in
modern materials science is often driven by the quest for combining, into a
single compound, several functionalities: not only the juxtaposition of the
latter functionalities, but especially their coupling, can open new horizons in
basic condensed matter physics as well as in technology. Semiconductor
spintronics makes no exception. In this context, we have discovered by means of
density-functional simulations that, when a sizeable spin-orbit coupling is
combined with ferroelectricity, such as in GeTe, one obtains novel
multifunctional materials - called Ferro-Electric Rashba Semi-Conductors
(FERSC) - where, thanks to a giant Rashba spin-splitting, the spin texture is
controllable and switchable via an electric field. This peculiar spin-electric
coupling can find a natural playground in small-gap insulators, such as
chalcogenides, and can bring brand new assets into the field of
electrically-controlled semiconductor spintronicsComment: 9 pages, 2 figures, in press on "Frontiers in Condensed Matter
Physics