No Arabic abstract
The nonlinear optical and optoelectronic properties of graphene with the emphasis on the processes of harmonic generation, frequency mixing, photon drag and photogalvanic effects as well as generation of photocurrents due to coherent interference effects, are reviewed. The article presents the state-of-the-art of this subject, including both recent advances and well-established results. Various physical mechanisms controlling transport are described in depth including phenomenological description based on symmetry arguments, models visualizing physics of nonlinear responses, and microscopic theory of individual effects.
Monolayer 1T-WTe2 is a quantum spin Hall insulator with a gapped bulk and gapless helical edge states persisting to temperatures around 100 K. Recent studies have revealed a topological-to-trivial phase transition as well the emergence of an unconventional, potentially topological superconducting state upon tuning the carrier concentration with gating. However, despite extensive studies, the effects of gating on the band structure and the helical edge states have not yet been established. In this work we present a combined low-temperature STM and first principles study of back-gated monolayer 1T-WTe2 films grown on graphene. Consistent with a quantum spin Hall system, the films show well-defined bulk gaps and clear edge states that span the gap. By directly measuring the density of states with STM spectroscopy, we show that the bulk band gap magnitude shows substantial changes with applied gate voltage, which is contrary to the naive expectation that a gate would rigidly shift the bands relative to the Fermi level. To explain our data, we carry out density functional theory and model Hamiltonian calculations which show that a gate electric field causes doping and inversion symmetry breaking which polarizes and spin-splits the bulk bands. Interestingly, the calculated spin splitting from the effective Rashba-like spin-orbit coupling can be in the tens of meV for the electric fields in the experiment, which may be useful for spintronics applications. Our work reveals the strong effect of electric fields on the bulk band structure of monolayer 1T-WTe2, which will play a critical role in our understanding of gate-induced phenomena in this system.
Our world is composed of various materials with different structures, where spin structures have been playing a pivotal role in spintronic devices of the contemporary information technology. Apart from conventional collinear spin materials such as collinear ferromagnets and collinear antiferromagnetically coupled materials, noncollinear spintronic materials have emerged as hot spots of research attention owing to exotic physical phenomena. In this Review, we firstly introduce two types noncollinear spin structures, i.e., the chiral spin structure that yields real-space Berry phases and the coplanar noncollinear spin structure that could generate momentum-space Berry phases, and then move to relevant novel physical phenomena including topological Hall effect, anomalous Hall effect, multiferroic, Weyl fermions, spin-polarized current, and spin Hall effect without spin-orbit coupling in these noncollinear spin systems. Afterwards, we summarize and elaborate the electric-field control of the noncollinear spin structure and related physical effects, which could enable ultralow power spintronic devices in future. In the final outlook part, we emphasize the importance and possible routes for experimentally detecting the intriguing theoretically predicted spin-polarized current, verifying the spin Hall effect in the absence of spin-orbit coupling and exploring the anisotropic magnetoresistance and domain-wall-related magnetoresistance effects for noncollinear antiferromagnetic materials.
We report a multiband transport study of bilayer graphene at high carrier densities. Employing a poly(ethylene)oxide-CsClO$_4$ solid polymer electrolyte gate we demonstrate the filling of the high energy subbands in bilayer graphene samples at carrier densities $|n|geq2.4times 10^{13}$ cm$^{-2}$. We observe a sudden increase of resistance and the onset of a second family of Shubnikov de Haas (SdH) oscillations as these high energy subbands are populated. From simultaneous Hall and magnetoresistance measurements together with SdH oscillations in the multiband conduction regime, we deduce the carrier densities and mobilities for the higher energy bands separately and find the mobilities to be at least a factor of two higher than those in the low energy bands.
Full experimental control of local spin-charge interconversion is of primary interest for spintronics. Heterostructures combining graphene with a strongly spin-orbit coupled two-dimensional (2D) material enable such functionality by design. Electric spin valve experiments have provided so far global information on such devices, while leaving the local interplay between symmetry breaking, charge flow across the heterointerface and aspects of topology unexplored. Here, we utilize magneto-optical Kerr microscopy to resolve the gate-tunable, local current-induced spin polarisation in graphene/WTe$_2$ van der Waals (vdW) heterostructures. It turns out that even for a nominal in-plane transport, substantial out-of-plane spin accumulation is induced by a corresponding out-of-plane current flow. We develop a theoretical model which explains the gate- and bias-dependent onset and spatial distribution of the massive Kerr signal on the basis of interlayer tunnelling, along with the reduced point group symmetry and inherent Berry curvature of the heterostructure. Our findings unravel the potential of 2D heterostructure engineering for harnessing topological phenomena for spintronics, and constitute an important further step toward electrical spin control on the nanoscale.
Recent experimental work has demonstrated optical control of spin wave emission by tuning the shape of the optical pulse (Satoh et al. Nature Photonics, 6, 662 (2012)). We reproduce these results and extend the scope of the control by investigating nonlinear effects for large amplitude excitations. We observe an accumulation of spin wave power at the center of the initial excitation combined with short-wavelength spin waves. These kind of nonlinear effects have not been observed in earlier work on nonlinearities of spin waves. Our observations pave the way for the manipulation of magnetic structures at a smaller scale than the beam focus, for instance in devices with all-optical control of magnetism.