Ultrafast THz probing of nonlocal orbital current in transverse multilayer metallic heterostructures

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Abstract

THz generation from femtosecond photoexcited spintronic heterostructures has become a versatile tool for investigating ultrafast spin-transport and transient charge-current in a non-contact and non-invasive manner. The equivalent effect from the orbital degree of freedom is still in the primitive stage. Here, we experimentally demonstrate orbital-to-charge current conversion in metallic heterostructures, consisting of a ferromagnetic layer adjacent to either a light or a heavy metal layer, through detection of the emitted THz pulses. Our temperature-dependent experiments help to disentangle the orbital and spin components that are manifested in the respective Hall-conductivities, contributing to THz emission. NiFe/Nb shows the strongest inverse orbital Hall effect with an experimentally extracted value of effective intrinsic Hall-conductivity, (σSOHint)eff~195Ω−1cm−1 , while CoFeB/Pt shows maximum contribution from the inverse spin Hall effect. In addition, we observe a nearly ten-fold enhancement in the THz emission due to pronounced orbital-transport in W-insertion heavy metal layer in CoFeB/W/Ta heterostructure as compared to CoFeB/Ta bilayer counterpart.

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Kumar, S., & Kumar, S. (2023). Ultrafast THz probing of nonlocal orbital current in transverse multilayer metallic heterostructures. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-43956-y

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