Abstract
We experimentally study the strain effect on electron spin relaxation in a semiconductor using nonlocal spin-transport measurements in lateral spin-valve devices. Application of in-plane and biaxial tensile strain to a (111)-oriented and heavily doped n-typeSi0.1Ge0.9 layer leads to lifting of the valley degeneracy in the conduction band and to reduction of the electron's effective mass, resulting in increased electron mobility. Nonlocal four-terminal spin signals in the strained-Si0.1Ge0.9 lateral spin-valve devices are markedly enhanced and the estimated spin lifetime becomes 3 times longer than that in strain-free devices at low temperatures. On the basis of a comparison of the experimental data and recent theories, we propose that only the donor-driven intervalley spin-flip scattering of electrons at low temperatures is partly suppressed for the strained and heavily doped Si0.1Ge0.9.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Naito, T., Yamada, M., Yamada, S., Sawano, K., & Hamaya, K. (2020). Suppression of Donor-Driven Spin Relaxation in Strained Si0.1Ge0.9. Physical Review Applied, 13(5). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevApplied.13.054025
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