4.8 Article

Far out-of-equilibrium spin populations trigger giant spin injection into atomically thin MoS2

Journal

NATURE PHYSICS
Volume 15, Issue 4, Pages 347-+

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41567-018-0406-3

Keywords

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Funding

  1. A*STAR PHAROS Programme on Topological Insulators (SERC) [152 74 00026]
  2. 2D Materials (SERC) [152 70 00012, 152 70 00016]
  3. Singapore Ministry of Education AcRF Tier 1 [MOE2018-T1-001-97, MOE2015-T2-2-065, MOE2016-T2-1-054]
  4. Singapore National Research Foundation [NRF-NRFF2016-05]
  5. Nanyang Technological University, NAP-SUG
  6. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [M1925-N28]
  7. Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies, a US DOE BES user facility

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Injecting spins from ferromagnetic metals into semiconductors efficiently is a crucial step towards the seamless integration of charge- and spin-information processing in a single device(1,2). However, efficient spin injection into semiconductors has remained an elusive challenge even after almost three decades of major scientific effort(3-5), due to, for example, the extremely low injection efficiencies originating from impedance mismatch(1,2,5,6), or technological challenges originating from stability and the costs of the approaches(7-12). We show here that, by utilizing the strongly out-of-equilibrium nature of subpicosecond spin-current pulses, we can obtain a massive spin transfer even across a bare ferromagnet/semi-conductor interface. We demonstrate this by producing ultra-short spin-polarized current pulses in Co and injecting them into monolayer MoS2, a two-dimensional semiconductor. The MoS2 layer acts both as the receiver of the spin injection and as a selective converter of the spin current into a charge current, whose terahertz emission is then measured. Strikingly, we measure a giant spin current, orders of magnitude larger than typical injected spin-current densities using currently available techniques. Our result demonstrates that technologically relevant spin currents do not require the very strong excitations typically associated with femtosecond lasers. Rather, they can be driven by ultralow-intensity laser pulses, finally enabling ultrashort spin-current pulses to be a technologically viable information carrier for terahertz spintronics.

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