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. 2011 Jun 26;10(9):655-9.
doi: 10.1038/nmat3052.

Electrically tunable spin injector free from the impedance mismatch problem

Electrically tunable spin injector free from the impedance mismatch problem

K Ando et al. Nat Mater. .

Abstract

Injection of spin currents into solids is crucial for exploring spin physics and spintronics. There has been significant progress in recent years in spin injection into high-resistivity materials, for example, semiconductors and organic materials, which uses tunnel barriers to circumvent the impedance mismatch problem; the impedance mismatch between ferromagnetic metals and high-resistivity materials drastically limits the spin-injection efficiency. However, because of this problem, there is no route for spin injection into these materials through low-resistivity interfaces, that is, Ohmic contacts, even though this promises an easy and versatile pathway for spin injection without the need for growing high-quality tunnel barriers. Here we show experimental evidence that spin pumping enables spin injection free from this condition; room-temperature spin injection into GaAs from Ni(81)Fe(19) through an Ohmic contact is demonstrated through dynamical spin exchange. Furthermore, we demonstrate that this exchange can be controlled electrically by applying a bias voltage across a Ni(81)Fe(19)/GaAs interface, enabling electric tuning of the spin-pumping efficiency.

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Comment in

  • Spintronics: Taming spin currents.
    Žutić I, Dery H. Žutić I, et al. Nat Mater. 2011 Aug 23;10(9):647-8. doi: 10.1038/nmat3097. Nat Mater. 2011. PMID: 21860400 No abstract available.

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