Chiral-phonon-activated spin Seebeck effect

ORAL · Invited

Abstract

Utilization of the interaction between spin and heat currents is the central focus of the field of spin caloritronics. Chiral phonons possessing angular momentum arising from the broken symmetry of a non-magnetic material creates the potential for generating spin currents at room temperature in response to a thermal gradient, precluding the need for a ferromagnetic contact. Here we show the observation of spin currents generated by chiral phonons in a two-dimensional layered hybrid organic-inorganic perovskite implanted with chiral cations when subjected to a thermal gradient. The generated spin current shows a strong dependence on the chirality of the film and external magnetic fields, of which the coefficient is orders of magnitude larger than that produced by the reported spin Seebeck effect. Our findings indicate the potential of chiral phonons for spin caloritronic applications and offer a new route toward spin generation in the absence of magnetic materials.

* J.L. acknowledges the financial support from the National Science Foundation under the award number CBET 1943813 for the ultrafast measurements, thermal characterizations, and thermal modeling. D.S. acknowledges the financial support provided by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, under the grant number DE-SC0020992 for the device fabrications. D.S. and W.Y. acknowledge the support through the Center for Hybrid Organic Inorganic Semiconductors for Energy (CHOISE), an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences for material synthesis, thin film preparations, and magnetic characterizations.

Publication: Kyunghoon Kim, Eric Vetter, Liang Yan, Cong Yang, Ziqi Wang, Rui Sun, Yu Yang, Andrew Cosmock, Xiao Li, Jun Zhou, Lifa Zhang,* Wei You,* Dali Sun,* Jun Liu,* Chiral-phonon-activated spin Seebeck effect, Nature Materials, 22, 322(2023).

Presenters

  • Jun Liu

    North Carolina State University

Authors

  • Jun Liu

    North Carolina State University

  • Kyunghoon Kim

    North Carolina State University

  • Eric Vetter

    North Carolina State University

  • Liang Yan

    University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

  • Cong Yang

    North Carolina State University

  • Ziqi Wang

    North Carolina State University

  • Rui Sun

    NC State University

  • Yu Yang

    Nanjing Normal University

  • Andrew H Comstock

    North Carolina State University

  • Xiao Li

    Nanjing Normal University

  • Jun Zhou

    Nanjing Normal University

  • Lifa Zhang

    Nanjing Normal University, Nanjing Normal University, China

  • Wei You

    University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

  • Dali Sun

    North Carolina State University, Physics Department, North Carolina State University