1. Strong evidence for d-electron spin transport at room temperature at a LaAlO3/SrTiO3interface
- Author
-
Ohshima, Ryo, Ando, Yuichiro, Matsuzaki, Kosuke, Susaki, Tomofumi, Weiler, Mathias, Klingler, Stefan, Huebl, Hans, Shikoh, Eiji, Shinjo, Teruya, Goennenwein, Sebastian T. B., and Shiraishi, Masashi
- Abstract
A d-orbital electron has an anisotropic electron orbital and is a source of magnetism. The realization of a two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) embedded at a LaAlO3/SrTiO3interface surprised researchers in materials and physical sciences because the 2DEG consists of 3d-electrons of Ti with extraordinarily large carrier mobility, even in the insulating oxide heterostructure. To date, a wide variety of physical phenomena, such as ferromagnetism and the quantum Hall effect, have been discovered in this 2DEG system, demonstrating the ability of d-electron 2DEG systems to provide a material platform for the study of interesting physics. However, because of both ferromagnetism and the Rashba field, long-range spin transport and the exploitation of spintronics functions have been believed difficult to implement in d-electron 2DEG systems. Here, we report the experimental demonstration of room-temperature spin transport in a d-electron-based 2DEG at a LaAlO3/SrTiO3interface, where the spin relaxation length is about 300 nm. Our finding, which counters the conventional understandings of d-electron 2DEGs, highlights the spin-functionality of conductive oxide systems and opens the field of d-electron spintronics.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF