Gate-Tunable Spin-Charge Conversion and the Role of Spin-Orbit Interaction in Graphene

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Abstract

The small spin-orbit interaction of carbon atoms in graphene promises a long spin diffusion length and the potential to create a spin field-effect transistor. However, for this reason, graphene was largely overlooked as a possible spin-charge conversion material. We report electric gate tuning of the spin-charge conversion voltage signal in single-layer graphene. Using spin pumping from an yttrium iron garnet ferrimagnetic insulator and ionic liquid top gate, we determined that the inverse spin Hall effect is the dominant spin-charge conversion mechanism in single-layer graphene. From the gate dependence of the electromotive force we showed the dominance of the intrinsic over Rashba spin-orbit interaction, a long-standing question in graphene research.

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Dushenko, S., Ago, H., Kawahara, K., Tsuda, T., Kuwabata, S., Takenobu, T., … Shiraishi, M. (2016). Gate-Tunable Spin-Charge Conversion and the Role of Spin-Orbit Interaction in Graphene. Physical Review Letters, 116(16). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.116.166102

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