All-electrical detection of the spin-charge conversion in nanodevices based on SrTiO3 two-dimensional electron gases

ORAL

Abstract

The Magnetoelectric Spin-Orbit (MESO) technology aims to bring logic into memory by combining a ferromagnet with a magnetoelectric (ME) element for information writing, and a spin-orbit (SO) element for information read-out through spin-charge conversion. Among candidate SO materials to achieve a large MESO output signal, oxide two-dimensional electron gases (2DEGs) have shown very large spin-charge conversion efficiencies due to their intrinsic Rashba Spin-Orbit signal, albeit mostly in spin-pumping experiments. Here, we report all-electrical spin-injection and spin-charge conversion experiments in nanoscale devices harnessing the inverse Edelstein effect of SrTiO3 2DEGs. We have designed, patterned and fabricated nanodevices in which a spin current injected from a cobalt layer into the 2DEG is converted into a charge current. We optimized the spin-charge conversion signal by applying back-gate voltages, and studied its temperature evolution. We further disentangled the inverse Edelstein contribution from spurious effects such as the planar Hall effect, the anomalous Hall effect or the anisotropic magnetoresistance. The combination of non-volatility and high energy efficiency of these devices could potentially lead to new technology paradigms for beyond-CMOS computing architectures.

* ERC Advanced Grant No. 833973 "FRESCO, ANR project CONTRABASS (ANR-20-CE24-0023-02), H2020 FETPROACT Grant TOCHA (824140), and Intel's Science and Technology Center – FEINMAN. grant 37338 (SANSIT) from Villum Fonden. MICINN (Project No. PID2021-122511OB-I00, Maria de Maeztu Units of Excellence Programme No. CEX2020-001038-M).

Presenters

  • Fernando Gallego

    CNRS/THALES

Authors

  • Fernando Gallego

    CNRS/THALES

  • Felix Trier

    Tech Univ of Denmark

  • Srijani Mallik

    Universite Paris-Saclay, Unité Mixte de Physique, CNRS, Thales, Université Paris-Saclay, Palaiseau

  • Julien Bréhin

    CNRS/THALES, Unité Mixte de Physique, CNRS, Thales, Université Paris-Saclay, Palaiseau

  • Julien Bréhin

    CNRS/THALES, Unité Mixte de Physique, CNRS, Thales, Université Paris-Saclay, Palaiseau

  • Sara Varotto

    CNRS-Thales, Unité Mixte de Physique, CNRS, Thales, Université Paris-Saclay, Palaiseau

  • Luis M Vicente-Arche

    CNRS/THALES, Unité Mixte de Physique, CNRS, Thales, Université Paris-Saclay, Palaiseau

  • Tanay Gosavy

    INTEL

  • Chia-Ching Lin

    INTEL

  • Jean-René Coudevylle

    C2N

  • Lucía Iglesias

    CNRS-Thales, Unité Mixte de Physique CNRS/Thales

  • Felix Casanova

    CIC nanoGUNE

  • Ian Young

    INTEL, Intel Corporation

  • Laurent Vila

    Spintec, Univ Grenoble Alpes

  • Jean-Phillippe Attane

    Spintec, Université Grenoble Alpes, CEA Grenoble

  • Manuel Bibes

    CNRS/THALES, Unité Mixte de Physique, CNRS, Thales, Université Paris-Saclay, Palaiseau