Open Access
Nature Communications, volume 7, issue 1, publication number 10878
Spin generation via bulk spin current in three-dimensional topological insulators
Xingyue Peng
1
,
Yiming Yang
1
,
RAJIV R. P. SINGH
1
,
Sergey Y. Savrasov
1
,
Dong Yu
1
1
Department of Physics, University of California, USA
|
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2016-03-02
Journal:
Nature Communications
scimago Q1
SJR: 4.887
CiteScore: 24.9
Impact factor: 14.7
ISSN: 20411723
PubMed ID:
26932574
General Chemistry
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
General Physics and Astronomy
Abstract
To date, spin generation in three-dimensional topological insulators is primarily modelled as a single-surface phenomenon, attributed to the momentum-spin locking on each individual surface. In this article, we propose a mechanism of spin generation where the role of the insulating yet topologically non-trivial bulk becomes explicit: an external electric field creates a transverse pure spin current through the bulk of a three-dimensional topological insulator, which transports spins between the top and bottom surfaces. Under sufficiently high surface disorder, the spin relaxation time can be extended via the Dyakonov–Perel mechanism. Consequently, both the spin generation efficiency and surface conductivity are largely enhanced. Numerical simulation confirms that this spin generation mechanism originates from the unique topological connection of the top and bottom surfaces and is absent in other two-dimensional systems such as graphene, even though they possess a similar Dirac cone-type dispersion. Future spintronic devices may exploit topological insulators, bulk-insulating materials possessing conductive surface states with orthogonally-locked electronic spin and momentum. Here, the authors propose a mechanism by which bulk spin currents drive surface spin accumulation in such a material.
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