Title
Hyperfine effects in ferromagnet-semiconductor heterostructure
Abstract
This thesis describes the effect of hyperfine interactions on non-equilibrium electron
spins in Fe/GaAs heterostructures. Nuclei in bulk GaAs are dynamically polarized
by a non-equilibrium electron spin population injected through an Fe/GaAs
Schottky tunnel barrier. The polarized nuclei in turn exert a large hyperfine field
upon the electron spins, resulting in rapid electron spin precession. Electrical measurements
of the steady state electron spin polarization as a function of applied
magnetic field for various injector biases and temperatures allow us to extract the
electron spin lifetime, Knight shift, and nuclear field parameters in bulk GaAs. We
successfully model electron spin dynamics using a coupled electron-nuclear drift
diffusion equation. We confirmed the strong hyperfine coupling between electron
and nuclear spins by performing nuclear magnetic resonance measurements on
Fe/GaAs devices in applied fields of only a few hundred Oe. Resonant frequencies
of different isotopes in the GaAs channel were detected.
In addition to exerting a hyperfine field on the electron spins, we also observe
a hyperfine induced spin-dependent Hall effect measured across the spin-polarized
region of a GaAs channel. Application of a transverse magnetic field results in
a modulation of the Hall voltage consistent with spin de-phasing. This signal
changes sign when the magnetization of the Fe contact is switched, indicating
sensitivity to electron spin direction. The observed spin-dependent Hall signal is
approximately two orders of magnitude larger than that expected from previous measurements of the spin Hall effect in n-GaAs, which was attributed to spinorbit
coupling and impurity scattering. This suggests that a different mechanism
is active in our system. We demonstrate full suppression of the spin-dependent
Hall signal by eliminating nuclear polarization through a field cycling procedure.
Additionally, while the electron spin accumulation, detected by a spin sensitive Fe
contact, persists up to 200 K, the spin-dependent Hall signal is not observed above
120 K, in coincidence with the disappearance of the nuclear spin polarization
due to delocalization of donor electrons. We conclude that the observed spindependent
Hall signal is coupled to the nuclear spin polarization. This is the first
observation of a hyperfine-induced spin Hall effect.
Description
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. April 2010. Major: Physics. Advisor: Paul A. Crowell. 1 computer file (PDF); xvii, 173 pages. Ill. (some col.)
Suggested Citation
Chan, Mun Keat.
(2010).
Hyperfine effects in ferromagnet-semiconductor heterostructure.
Retrieved from the University of Minnesota Digital Conservancy,
https://hdl.handle.net/11299/90722.