Abstract
During the past years, there has been renewed interest in the wide-bandgap II-VI semiconductor ZnO, triggered by promising prospects for spintronic applications. First, ferromagnetism was predicted for dilute magnetic doping. In a comprehensive investigation of ZnO:Co thin films based on the combined measurement of macroscopic and microscopic properties, we find no evidence for carrier-mediated itinerant ferromagnetism. Phase-pure, crystallographically excellent ZnO:Co is uniformly paramagnetic. Superparamagnetism arises when phase separation or defect formation occurs, due to nanometer-sized metallic precipitates. Other compounds like ZnO:(Li, Ni) and ZnO:Cu do not exhibit indication of ferromagnetism. Second, its small spin-orbit coupling and correspondingly large spin coherence length makes ZnO suitable for transporting or manipulating spins in spintronic devices. From optical pump/optical probe experiments, we find a spin dephasing time of the order of 15ns at low temperatures, which we attribute to electrons bound to Al donors. In all-electrical magnetotransport measurements, we successfully create and detect a spin-polarized ensemble of electrons and transport this spin information across several nanometers. We derive a spin lifetime of 2.6ns for these itinerant spins at low temperatures, corresponding well to results from an electrical pump/optical probe experiment.
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Opel, M., Goennenwein, S. T. B., Althammer, M., Nielsen, K. W., Karrer-Müller, E. M., Bauer, S., … Gross, R. (2014). Zinc oxide -From dilute magnetic doping to spin transport. Physica Status Solidi (B) Basic Research, 251(9), 1700–1709. https://doi.org/10.1002/pssb.201350230
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