We unravel theoretically a key intrinsic relaxation mechanism among the
low-lying singlet and triplet donor-pair states in silicon, an important
element in the fast-developing field of spintronics and quantum computation.
Despite the perceived weak spin-orbit coupling (SOC) in Si, we find that our
discovered relaxation mechanism, combined with the electron-phonon and
inter-donor interactions, dominantly drives the transitions in the two-electron
states over a large range of donor coupling regime. The scaling of the
relaxation rate with inter-donor exchange interaction J goes from J5 to
J4 at the low to high temperature limits. Our analytical study draws on the
symmetry analysis over combined band, donor envelope and valley configurations.
It uncovers naturally the dependence on the donor-alignment direction and
triplet spin orientation, and especially on the dominant SOC source from donor
impurities. While a magnetic field is not necessary for this relaxation, unlike
in the single-donor spin relaxation, we discuss the crossover behavior with
increasing Zeeman energy in order to facilitate comparison with experiments.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figure. After-publication updat