Roberto Myers Seminar: Using Asymmetric Crystals for New Functionality: Moving Spins with Heat Using Spin-Orbit Coupling and Dopant-less Diodes Using Polarization Charge
Roberto Myers
Professor, Materials Science and Engineering
and Electrical and Computer Engineering
Ohio State University
Using Asymmetric Crystals for New Functionality: Moving Spins with Heat Using
Spin-Orbit Coupling and Dopant-less Diodes Using Polarization Charge
Using Asymmetric Crystals for New Functionality: Moving Spins with Heat Using
Spin-Orbit Coupling and Dopant-less Diodes Using Polarization Charge
November 7, 2012 | 4:00pm | ESB 2001
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Abstract
The lack of inversion
symmetry in certain crystals leads to interesting properties. Two such
properties, the spin-orbit effect and polarization charge, can be exploited for
new thermoelectric and optoelectronic devices. In the first part of the talk, I
will introduce the heat/spin conversion phenomenon, the spin-Seebeck effect. Phonons
interact with the magnetic moments in a material driving them away from
equilibrium inducing a diffusive spin current, which can be converted in a
neighboring material into an electric voltage. Via the spin-orbit effect, the
heat/spin interactions can occur even in non-magnetic, but spin-polarized
materials. For example in InSb, the spin-Seebeck effect exhibits a magnitude of
up to 8 mV/K, which is as large as the highest known charge based
thermoelectric effect opening new possibilities for thermal energy conversion
devices based on spin. In the second part of the talk, the anisotropic property
of polarization charge in (Ga,Al)N compounds is introduced. If the composition
of (Ga,Al)N is graded along the dipole direction, a slab of bound polarization
charge is uniformly distributed in the crystal, which is compensated by free
charges. By grading the composition in a back and forth manner within a
nanowire (GaNàAlNàGaN)
a polarization-induced pn-junction is formed. Unlike
other pn-diodes, the polarization-induced diodes can be formed without
intentional impurity doping, do not freeze out at low temperature, yet still
exhibit rectification and ultraviolet light emission at the bandgap. This work was
done in collaboration with C. M. Jaworski, J. P. Heremans, S. Carnevale, T. F. Kent,
J. Yang, P. J. Phillips, and M. J. Mills.
Biography
Roberto Myers received
his B.S.E. in Materials Science and Engineering at the University of
Pennsylvania in 2001 and his PhD in Materials in 2006 at the University of
California, Santa Barbara. Dr. Myers joined the faculty at Ohio State
University as an Assistant Professor in Materials Science and Engineering with
a co-appointment in Electrical and Computer Engineering in Fall 2008. His
current research focuses on thermal spintronics, as well as III-Nitride
molecular beam epitaxy of nano-heterostructures, rare-earth Gd doped Nitrides
combined with optical, electronic, and magnetic characterization. He has
published about 40 journal articles, was awarded the Newcomb Cleveland prize in
2005, and the NSF CAREER award in 2011.
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