Electrically tunable detector of THz-frequency signals based on an antiferromagnet

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Abstract

A concept of an electrically tunable resonance detector of THz-frequency signals based on an antiferromagnetic/heavy metal (AFM/HM) heterostructure is proposed. The conversion of a THz-frequency input signal into DC voltage is done using the inverse spin Hall effect in an (AFM/HM) bilayer. An additional bias DC in the HM layer can be used to vary the effective anisotropy of the AFM and, therefore, to tune the antiferromagnetic resonance (AFMR) frequency. The proposed AFM/HM heterostructure works as a resonance-type quadratic detector, which can be tuned by the bias current in the range of at least 10% of the AFMR frequency, and our estimations show that the sensitivity of this detector could be comparable to that of modern detectors based on the Schottky, Gunn, or graphene-based diodes.

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Safin, A., Puliafito, V., Carpentieri, M., Finocchio, G., Nikitov, S., Stremoukhov, P., … Slavin, A. (2020). Electrically tunable detector of THz-frequency signals based on an antiferromagnet. Applied Physics Letters, 117(22). https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0031053

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