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Gate-tunable graphene spin valve

Authors :
Yung Fu Chen
Michael S. Fuhrer
Sungjae Cho
Source :
Applied Physics Letters. 91:123105
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
AIP Publishing, 2007.

Abstract

Graphitic nanostructures, e.g. carbon nanotubes (CNT) and graphene, have been proposed as ideal materials for spin conduction[1-7]; they have long electronic mean free paths[8] and small spin-orbit coupling[9], hence are expected to have very long spin-scattering times. In addition, spin injection and detection in graphene opens new opportunities to study exotic electronic states such as the quantum Hall[10,11] and quantum spin Hall[9] states, and spin-polarized edge states[12] in graphene ribbons. Here we perform the first non-local four-probe experiments[13] on graphene contacted by ferromagnetic Permalloy electrodes. We observe sharp switching and often sign-reversal of the non-local resistance at the coercive field of the electrodes, indicating definitively the presence of a spin current between injector and detector. The non-local resistance changes magnitude and sign quasi-periodically with back-gate voltage, and Fabry-Perot-like oscillations[6,14,15] are observed, consistent with quantum-coherent transport. The non-local resistance signal can be observed up to at least T = 300 K.

Details

ISSN :
10773118 and 00036951
Volume :
91
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Applied Physics Letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........4076fc5248db78b02bc19c5244c0d86e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2784934