English

Graphene Spin Transistor

Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics 2007-12-05 v1

Abstract

Graphitic nanostructures, e.g. carbon nanotubes (CNT) and graphene, have been proposed as ideal materials for spin conduction[1-7]; they have long electronic mean free paths[8] and small spin-orbit coupling[9], hence are expected to have very long spin-scattering times. In addition, spin injection and detection in graphene opens new opportunities to study exotic electronic states such as the quantum Hall[10,11] and quantum spin Hall[9] states, and spin-polarized edge states[12] in graphene ribbons. Here we perform the first non-local four-probe experiments[13] on graphene contacted by ferromagnetic Permalloy electrodes. We observe sharp switching and often sign-reversal of the non-local resistance at the coercive field of the electrodes, indicating definitively the presence of a spin current between injector and detector. The non-local resistance changes magnitude and sign quasi-periodically with back-gate voltage, and Fabry-Perot-like oscillations[6,14,15] are observed, consistent with quantum-coherent transport. The non-local resistance signal can be observed up to at least T = 300 K.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0706.1597,
  title  = {Graphene Spin Transistor},
  author = {Sungjae Cho and Yung-Fu Chen and Michael S. Fuhrer},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0706.1597},
  year   = {2007}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-21T08:37:24.886Z