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Spin-momentum locking is a unique feature of spin-orbit coupled materials and a key to their promise of applications in spintronics and quantum computation. Much of the existing work has been focused on an orthogonal locking between the directions of spin and momentum vectors in the context of both topological and non-topological materials. Mechanisms responsible for non-orthogonal spin-momentum locking (NOSML) have drawn little attention, although an NOSML effect has been reported on the topological surface of $alpha$-$Sn$. Here, we demonstrate how spin-orbit scattering from non-magnetic impurities can produce the NOSML state. The parameter describing spin-orbit coupling strength in our analysis of the NOMSL could be extracted directly from the spin-resolved angle-resolved photoemission (S-ARPES) spectra. Our formalism is applicable to all spin-orbit coupled systems and not limited only to topological states. An understanding of NOSML effects bears on spin-orbit dependent phenomena more generally, including issues of spin-to-charge conversion and the interpretation of quasiparticle interference (QPI) patterns and scanning-tunneling spectra (STS) in materials.
The momentum and spin of charge carriers in the topological insulators are constrained to be perpendicular to each other due to the strong spin-orbit coupling. We have investigated this unique spin-momentum locking property in Sb2Te3 topological insu
We investigate the effects of spin-momentum locking on the interference and diffraction patterns due to a double- or single-slit in an electronic emph{Gedankenexperiment}. We show that the inclusion of the spin-degree-of-freedom, when coupled to the
Three-dimensional (3D) topological insulators (TIs) are known to carry 2D Dirac-like topological surface states in which spin-momentum locking prohibits backscattering. When thinned down to a few nanometers, the hybridization between the topological
Significant insights into non-Abelian quantum Hall states were obtained from studying special multi-particle interaction Hamiltonians, whose unique ground states are the Moore-Read and Read-Rezayi states for the case of spinless electrons. We general
Coupling degrees of freedom of distinct nature plays a critical role in numerous physical phenomena. The recent emergence of layered materials provides a laboratory for studying the interplay between internal quantum degrees of freedom of electrons.