Since the 1980s, the generation and detection of spin currents has relied on ferromagnets. Their switching today relies on spin-orbit torque from heavy metals. Nevertheless, spin injection in semiconductors has rather low efficiency.
Ferroelectric Rashba semiconductors (FERSC) [1,2] may constitute a new paradigm for semiconductor spintronics, thanks to the combination of semiconductivity, large spin-orbit interaction, and the non-volatility provided by ferroelectricity.
Here we report the room-temperature ferroelectric switching of spin-to-charge conversion in epitaxial GeTe films. We first show that ferroelectricity in GeTe can be reversed by electrical gating despite its high carrier density. Then, we reveal a spin-to-charge conversion as effective as in Pt, but whose sign switches with the ferroelectric polarization.
These results open a route towards devices combining spin-logic and memory integrated into a silicon-compatible material.
Spin-orbit coupling effects in materials with broken inversion symmetry are responsible for peculiar spin textures. Among them, ferroelectric materials allow for non-volatile control of the spin degree of freedom through the non-volatile electrical inversion of the spin texture, through to their reversible spontaneous polarization. Such functionality holds potential for technological applications exploiting spin effects controlled by electric fields. The ferroelectric Rashba semiconductor Germanium Telluride stands out as material for Spin-Orbitronics: its ferroelectricity provides a nonvolatile state variable able to generate and drive a giant bulk Rashba-type spin splitting of the electronic bands, while its semiconductivity would allow for the realization of spin-based transistors. The ferroelectric control of the bands topology and of the spin texture is expected to reflect in the tunability of the spin transport properties. Here we exploit the unidirectional spin Hall magnetoresistance of Fe/GeTe heterostructures to characterize charge-to-spin conversion in GeTe. Our preliminary results indicate a sizable conversion efficiency at low temperature (120 K), which promotes ferroelectric Rashba semiconductors as promising candidates for the implementation of non-volatile electrically reconfigurable computing devices based on spin transport in semiconductors.
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