Orbitronics in Two-dimensional Materials
Abstract
Orbitronics explores the control and manipulation of electronic orbital angular momentum in solid-state systems, opening new pathways for information processing and storage. One significant advantage of orbitronics over spintronics is that it does not rely on spin-orbit coupling, thereby broadening the range of non-magnetic materials that can be utilized for these applications. It also introduces new topological features related to electronic orbital angular momentum, and clarifies some long-standing challenges in understanding experiments that rely on the conventional concept of valley transport. This review highlights recent advances in orbitronics, particularly in relation to two-dimensional materials. We examine the fundamental principles underlying the generation, transport, and dynamics of orbital angular momentum to illustrate how the unique properties of two-dimensional materials can promote orbitronic phenomena. We also outline potential future research directions and address some outstanding questions in this field.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2502.12339,
title = {Orbitronics in Two-dimensional Materials},
author = {Tarik P. Cysne and Luis M. Canonico and Marcio Costa and R. B. Muniz and Tatiana G. Rappoport},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2502.12339},
year = {2025}
}
Comments
19 pages, 4 figures, 1 table