Spin-orbit coupling in elemental two-dimensional materials
Abstract
The fundamental spin-orbit coupling and spin mixing in graphene and rippled honeycomb lattice materials silicene, germanene, stanene, blue phosphorene, arsenene, antimonene, and bismuthene is investigated from first principles. The intrinsic spin-orbit coupling in graphene is revisited using multi-band theory, showing the presence of non-zero spin mixing in graphene despite the mirror symmetry. However, the spin mixing itself does not lead to the the Elliott-Yafet spin relaxation mechanism, unless the mirror symmetry is broken by external factors. For other aforementioned elemental materials we present the spin-orbit splittings at relevant symmetry points, as well as the spin admixture as a function of energy close to the band extrema or Fermi levels. We find that spin-orbit coupling scales as the square of the atomic number Z, as expected for valence electrons in atoms. For isolated bands, it is found that . The spin-mixing parameter also exhibits giant anisotropy which, to a large extent, can be controlled by tuning the Fermi level. Our results for can be directly transferred to spin relaxation time due to the Elliott-Yafet mechanism, and therefore provide an estimate of the upper limit for spin lifetimes in materials with space inversion center.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1907.05152,
title = {Spin-orbit coupling in elemental two-dimensional materials},
author = {Marcin Kurpas and Paulo E. Faria Junior and Martin Gmitra and Jaroslav Fabian},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1907.05152},
year = {2019}
}
Comments
10 pages, 8 figures