2005 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 21–25, 2005;
Los Angeles, CA
Session W10: Focus Session: Spin Transport and Spin Hall Effect
2:30 PM–5:18 PM,
Thursday, March 24, 2005
LACC
Room: 153B
Sponsoring
Units:
DMP GMAG
Chair: Allan MacDonald, University of Texas
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.MAR.W10.1
Abstract: W10.00001 : Observation of spin Coulomb drag in a two-dimensional electron gas
2:30 PM–3:06 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Joseph Orenstein
(UC Berkeley and LBNL)
A electron propagating through a solid carries spin in addition to its mass
and charge. However, unlike that latter two attributes, the spin of the
electron is not a conserved quantity. Despite this fact, it has been widely
assumed that for times short compared with the spin relaxation time the spin
current obeys the same rules as the charge and mass current (momentum). Of
these rules, one of the most fundamental is that the current is not affected
by ``normal'' electron-electron (e-e) collisions, which conserve total
momentum. In this talk we demonstrate that this assumption is invalid, and
that over a broad temperature range the damping of spin transport in a
two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) is dominated by e-e collisions. In this
work spin transport is characterized by the transient spin grating technique
[1], which is based on optical injection of spin-polarized electrons. The
2DEG resides in a GaAs quantum well, into which electrons are donated by Si
impurites in the GaAlAs barrier layers. Excitation of GaAs with two
coherent, orthogonally polarized beams of light generates a wave of
electron-spin polarization whose wavevector is controlled by the angle
between the two beams. From the spin-density-wave decay rate as a function
of wavevector we obtain the spin diffusion coefficient, D$_{s}$, in the
range T= 5K-295 K. We obtain the charge diffusion coefficient, D$_{c}$ from
4-contact transport measurements. We find that D$_{s }$is substantially
suppressed compared with D$_{c}$. Their ratio yields directly the ``spin
Coulomb drag'' resistivity, $\rho _{\uparrow \downarrow } $, which is
proportional to the rate at which e-e collisions transfer momentum between
up and down-spin populations [2]. The measured $\rho _{\uparrow \downarrow }
$ is in quantitative agreement with theoretical predictions. These results
indicate that modeling of spintronic devices in high-mobility semiconductors
must include a strong suppression of spin diffusion originating from e-e
interactions.
In collaboration with C. Weber, N. Gedik, J.E. Moore, J. Stephens, and D.D.
Awschalom, and supported by DOE.
[1] A.R. Cameron et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 76, 4793 (1996).
[2] I. D'Amico and G. Vignale, Phys. Rev. B 62, 4853 (2000).
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.MAR.W10.1