We describe a new effect in semiconductor spintronics that leads to dissipationless spin currents in paramagnetic spin-orbit coupled systems. We argue that in a high-mobility two-dimensional electron system with substantial Rashba spin-orbit coupling, a spin current that flows perpendicular to the charge current is intrinsic. In the usual case where both spin-orbit split bands are occupied, the intrinsic spin-Hall conductivity has a universal value for zero quasiparticle spectral broadening.
We construct a theory of charge transport by the surface states of topological insulators in three dimensions. The focus is on the experimentally relevant case when the Fermi energy εF and transport scattering time τ satisfy εF τ / 1, but εF lies below the bottom of the conduction band. Our theory is based on the spin density matrix and takes the quantum Liouville equation as its starting point. The scattering term is determined to linear order in the impurity density ni and explicitly accounts for the absence of backscattering, while screening is included in the random phase approximation. The main contribution to the conductivity is ∝ n −1 i and has different carrier density dependencies for different forms of scattering, while an additional contribution is independent of ni. The dominant scattering angles can be inferred by studying the ratio of the transport time to the Bloch lifetime as a function of the Wigner-Seitz radius rs. The current generates a spin polarization that could provide a smoking-gun signature of surface state transport. We also discuss the effect on the surface states of adding metallic contacts.
Motivated by recent interest in novel spintronics effects, we develop a semiclassical theory of spin transport that is valid for spin-orbit coupled bands. Aside from the obvious convective term in which the average spin is transported at the wave packet group velocity, the spin current has additional contributions from the wave packet's spin and torque dipole moments. Electric field corrections to the group velocity and carrier spin contribute to the convective term. Summing all terms we obtain an expression for the intrinsic spin-Hall conductivity of a hole-doped semiconductor, which agrees with the Kubo formula prediction for the same quantity. We discuss the calculation of spin accumulation, which illustrates the importance of the torque dipole near the boundary of the system.
We develop a formalism for treating coherent wave-packet dynamics of charge and spin carriers in degenerate and nearly degenerate bands. We consider the two-band case carefully in view of spintronics applications, where transitions between spin-split bands often occur even for relatively weak electromagnetic fields. We demonstrate that much of the semiclassical formalism developed for the single-band case can be generalized to multiple bands, and examine the nontrivial non-Abelian corrections arising from the additional degree of freedom. Along with the center of mass motion in crystal momentum and real space, one must also include a pseudo-spin to characterize the dynamics between the bands. We derive the wave packet energy up to the first order gradient correction and obtain the equations of motion for the real- and $k$-space center of the wave-packet, as well as for the pseudo-spin. These equations include the non-Abelian Berry curvature terms and a non-Abelian correction to the group velocity. As an example, we apply our formalism to describe coherent wave-packet evolution under the action of an electric field, demonstrating that it leads to electrical separation of up and down spins. A sizable separation will be observed, with a large degree of tunability, making this mechanism a practical method of generating a spin polarization. We then turn our attention to a magnetic field, where we recover Larmor precession, which cannot be obtained from a single-band point of view. In this case, the gradient energy correction can be regarded as due to a magnetic moment from the self-rotation of the wave-packet, and we calculate its value for the light holes in the spherical four-band Luttinger model.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figur
Research on Si quantum dot spin qubits is motivated by the long spin coherence times measured in Si, yet the orbital spectrum of Si dots is increased as a result of the valley degree of freedom. The valley degeneracy may be lifted by the interface potential, which gives rise to a valley-orbit coupling, but the latter depends on the detailed structure of the interface and is generally unknown a priori. These facts motivate us to provide an extensive study of spin qubits in Si double quantum dots, accounting fully for the valley degree of freedom and assuming no prior knowledge of the valleyorbit coupling. For single-spin qubits we analyze the spectrum of a multivalley double quantum dot, discuss the initialization of one qubit, identify the conditions for the lowest energy two-electron states to be a singlet and a triplet well separated from other states, and determine analytical expressions for the exchange splitting. For singlet-triplet qubits we analyze the single-dot spectrum and initialization process, the double-dot spectrum, singlet-triplet mixing in an inhomogeneous magnetic field and the peculiarities of spin blockade in multivalley qubits. We review briefly the hyperfine interaction in Si and discuss its role in spin blockade in natural Si, including intravalley and intervalley effects. We study the evolution of the double-dot spectrum as a function of magnetic field. We address briefly the situation in which the valley-orbit coupling is different in each dot due to interface roughness. We propose a new experiment for measuring the valley splitting in a single quantum dot. We discuss the possibility of devising other types of qubits in Si QDs, and the size of the intervaley coupling due to the Coulomb interaction.
We study exchange coupling in Si double quantum dots, which have been proposed as suitable candidates for spin qubits due to their long spin coherence times. We discuss in detail two alternative schemes which have been proposed for implementing spin qubits in quantum dots. One scheme uses spin states in a single dot and the interdot exchange coupling controls interactions between unbiased dots. The other scheme employs the singlet and triplet states of a biased double dot as the two-level system making up the qubit and exchange controls the energy splitting of the levels. Exchange in these two configurations depends differently on system parameters. Our work relies on the Heitler-London approximation and the Hund-Mulliken molecular orbital method. The results we obtain enable us to investigate the sensitivity of the system to background charge fluctuations and determine the conditions under which optimal spots, at which the influence of the charge noise is minimized, may exist in Si double quantum dot structures.
We investigate the possibility of observing the anomalous Hall effect (AHE) in two dimensional paramagnetic systems. We apply the semiclassical equations of motion to carriers in the conduction and valence bands of wurtzite and zincblende quantum wells in the exchange field generated by magnetic impurities and we calculate the anomalous Hall conductivity based on the Berry phase corrections to the carrier velocity. We show that under certain circumstances this conductivity approaches one half of the conductance quantum. We consider the effect of an external magnetic field and show that for a small enough field the theory is unaltered.
This article reviews recent theoretical and experimental work on transport due to the surface states of three-dimensional topological insulators. The theoretical focus is on longitudinal transport in the presence of an electric field, including Boltzmann transport, quantum corrections and weak localization, as well as longitudinal and Hall transport in the presence of both electric and magnetic fields and/or magnetizations. Special attention is paid to transport at finite doping, to the π-Berry phase, which leads to the absence of backscattering, Klein tunneling and half-quantized Hall response. Signatures of surface states in ordinary transport and magnetotransport are clearly identified. The review also covers transport experiments of the past years, reviewing the initial obscuring of surface transport by bulk transport, and the way transport due to the surface states has increasingly been identified experimentally. Current and likely future experimental challenges are given prominence and the current status of the field is assessed.
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