2008 APS March Meeting
Volume 53, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 10–14, 2008;
New Orleans, Louisiana
Session P2: Controlling Electron Spins: Propagation and Dynamics
8:00 AM–9:48 AM,
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Morial Convention Center
Room: LaLouisiane C
Sponsoring
Unit:
DCMP
Chair: Joseph Orenstein, University of California, Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Abstract ID: BAPS.2008.MAR.P2.2
Abstract: P2.00002 : Evidence for a persistent spin helix in a 2-dimensional electron gas
8:36 AM–9:12 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Jake D. Koralek
(LBNL and UC Berkeley)
Using time-resolved transient spin-grating spectroscopy we
uncover strong
evidence for the existence of a persistent spin helix (PSH) in a
2-dimensional electron gas. The PSH is a collective helical spin
excitation
that persists far beyond the lifetime of its individual
constituent spins
when the Rashba ($\alpha )$ and Dresselhaus ($\beta )$ spin-orbit
coupling
terms are comparable. The helix is predicted to have an infinite
lifetime
when they are exactly equal. These effects have great potential for
application to spintronics where they would allow rapid gate
control of the
spin lifetime over several orders of magnitude in systems with
both high
electron density and high mobility. The transient spin-grating
technique is
ideally suited for study of the PSH as it can directly measure
the dynamics
of optically generated spin excitations of variable spatial
periodicity.
This is accomplished by interfering two non-collinear, orthogonally
polarized pulses from a Ti:Sapphire laser at the surface of the
sample.
Through the optical orientation effect in GaAs, this generates a
spin
excitation which varies periodically in space between up and down
spins at a
wavelength determined by the angle between the interfering
pulses. We tune
the spin-orbit coupling in our GaAs based quantum wells through
asymmetric
modulation doping, which has allowed us to increase $\alpha $ to be
comparable to $\beta $. In these systems we find that
spin-gratings with
periodicity comparable to that of the PSH can live several orders of
magnitude longer than the individual spin lifetime as measured by
time-resolved Faraday rotation. We study this over a wide range
of parameter
space, systematically varying doping asymmetry, well width, and
disorder. We
find that the lifetime of the PSH in these samples is ultimately
limited by
the spatial disorder in the Rashba strength, and by a novel
relaxation
mechanism based on phonon-induced Rashba coupling. Supported by
DMSE office
of BES-DOE, NSF, MARCO, ASEE and CNID.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2008.MAR.P2.2