Electronic spin transport in graphene field effect transistors

Abstract

Spin transport experiments in graphene, a single layer of carbon atoms, indicate spin relaxation times that are significantly shorter than the theoretical predictions. We investigate experimentally whether these short spin relaxation times are due to extrinsic factors, such as spin relaxation caused by low impedance contacts, enhanced spin flip processes at the device edges or the presence of an aluminium oxide layer on top of graphene in some samples. Lateral spin valve devices using a field effect transistor geometry allowed for the investigation of the spin relaxation as a function of the charge density, going continuously from metallic hole to electron conduction (charge densities of n 1012cm-2) via the Dirac charge neutrality point (n 0). The results are quantitatively described by a one dimensional spin diffusion model where the spin relaxation via the contacts is taken into account. Spin valve experiments for various injector/detector separations and spin precession experiments reveal that the longitudinal (T1) and the transversal (T2) relaxation times are similar. The anisotropy of the spin relaxation times τ and τ, when the spins are injected parallel or perpendicular to the graphene plane, indicates that the effective spin orbit fields do not lie exclusively in the two dimensional graphene plane. Furthermore, the proportionality between the spin relaxation time and the momentum relaxation time indicates that the spin relaxation mechanism is of the Elliott-Yafet type. For carrier mobilities of 2-5× 103 cm2/Vs and for graphene flakes of 0.1-2 μm in width, we found spin relaxation times of the order of 50-200 ps, times which appear not to be determined by the extrinsic factors mentioned above.

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