Dynamic Nuclear Polarization from Topological Insulator Helical Edge States
ORAL
Abstract
Topological insulators are promising for spintronics and related technologies due to their spin-momentum-locked edge states, which are protected by time-reversal symmetry. However, most known topological insulator materials naturally contain spinful nuclei, and their hyperfine coupling to helical edge states intrinsically breaks time-reversal symmetry, removing the topological protection and enabling the buildup of dynamic nuclear spin polarization through hyperfine-assisted backscattering. Here, we calculate scattering probabilities and nuclear polarization for edge channels containing up to $34$ nuclear spins using a numerically exact analysis that exploits the symmetries of the problem to drastically reduce the computational complexity. We then show the emergence of universal scaling properties that allow us to extrapolate our findings to vastly larger and experimentally relevant system sizes. We find that significant nuclear polarization can result from relatively weak helical edge currents, suggesting that it may be an important factor affecting spin transport in topological insulator devices.
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Presenters
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Antonio Russo
Department of Physics, Virginia Tech, Physics, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Authors
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Antonio Russo
Department of Physics, Virginia Tech, Physics, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
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Edwin Barnes
Virginia Tech, Department of Physics, Virginia Tech, Physics, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Physics, Virginia Tech
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Sophia Economou
Department of Physics, Virginia Tech, Physics, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University