Valley-Mediated and Electrically Switched Bipolar-Unipolar Transition of the Spin-Diode Effect in Heavy Group-IV Monolayers
Abstract
Spin and valley are two coupled degrees of freedom relevant for low-energy electrons in heavy group-IV monolayers with strong spin-orbit couplings, such as silicene, germanene, and stanene. Using these materials, we propose that a spin-diode effect driven by longitudinal bias can be realized in a ferromagnetic/antiferromagnetic junction, where an interlayer electric field with strength Ez is applied in the antiferromagnetic region. This effect shows a unique bipolar-unipolar transition strongly depending on Ez. When Ez=0 , only electrons from one valley contribute to electric current, with one spin only moving forward and the opposite spin only moving backward, thus corresponding to a bipolar spin diode. When Ez is increased, the active valley can be switched to the other valley, and only electrons of one spin orientation are involved in transport and only move forward, corresponding to a unipolar spin diode. This transition is attributed to the characteristic band-to-band tunneling mechanism of spin-valley matching. We also find that, by reversing the direction of the interlayer electric field, the bipolar or unipolar regime of the spin diode does not change as a result of the symmetry in transport. By electrically adjusting the longitudinal bias and Ez, we further prove that the signals produced by the spin diode are strong enough to be observed even when the magnetic exchange fields are on the order of 1 meV, which is fully available in experimentally reported samples with Eu (Gd )-intercalated materials or those in proximity to ferromagnetic insulators. Our findings on the valley-mediated controllability and switching between the bipolar and unipolar regimes of the spin-diode operation suggest promising applications of heavy group-IV monolayers in improvement of reprogrammable spin logic and nonvolatile memory.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review Applied
- Pub Date:
- June 2019
- DOI:
- 10.1103/PhysRevApplied.11.064047
- Bibcode:
- 2019PhRvP..11f4047Z