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Magnetic tunnel spin injectors for spintronics

Posted on:2007-02-27Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Stanford UniversityCandidate:Wang, RogerFull Text:PDF
GTID:1450390005981382Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
Research in spin-based electronics, or "spintronics", has a universal goal to develop applications for electron spin in a broad range of electronics and strives to produce low power nanoscale devices. Spin injection into semiconductors is an important initial step in the development of spintronic devices, with the goal to create a highly spin polarized population of electrons inside a semiconductor at room temperature for study, characterization, and manipulation. This dissertation investigates magnetic tunnel spin injectors that aim to meet the spin injection requirements needed for potential spintronic devices.; Magnetism and spin are inherently related, and chapter 1 provides an introduction on magnetic tunneling and spintronics. Chapter 2 then describes the fabrication of the spin injector structures studied in this dissertation, and also illustrates the optical spin detection technique that correlates the measured electroluminescence polarization from quantum wells to the electron spin polarization inside the semiconductor.; Chapter 3 reports the spin injection from the magnetic tunnel transistor (MTT) spin injector, which is capable of producing highly spin polarized tunneling currents by spin selective scattering in its multilayer structure. The MTT achieves ∼10% lower bound injected spin polarization in GaAs at 1.4 K. Chapter 4 reports the spin injection from CoFe-MgO(100) tunnel spin injectors, where spin dependent tunneling through MgO(100) produces highly spin polarized tunneling currents. These structures achieve lower bound spin polarizations exceeding 50% at 100 K and 30% in GaAs at 290 K. The CoFe-MgO spin injectors also demonstrate excellent thermal stability, maintaining high injection efficiencies even after exposure to temperatures of up to 400 C. Bias voltage and temperature dependent studies on these structures indicate a significant dependence of the electroluminescence polarization on the spin and carrier recombination lifetimes inside the semiconductor.; Chapter 5 investigates these spin and carrier lifetime effects on the electroluminescence polarization using time resolved optical techniques. These studies suggest that a peak in the carrier lifetime with temperature is responsible for the nonmonotonic temperature dependence observed in the electroluminescence polarization, and that the initially injected spin polarization from CoFe-MgO spin injectors is a nearly temperature independent ∼70% from 10 K up to room temperature.
Keywords/Search Tags:Spin injectors, Electronics, Spintronics, Spin polarization, Highly spin polarized tunneling currents, Temperature, Reports the spin injection, Electron spin
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