Electronic spin transport and spin precession in single graphene layers at room temperature
Nikolaos Tombros, Csaba Jozsa, Mihaita Popinciuc, Harry T. Jonkman and, Bart J. van Wees (Physics of Nanodevices, Molecular Electronics, Zernike, Institute for Advanced Materials, The Netherlands)

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates room-temperature spin transport and precession in single graphene layers, with micrometer-scale spin relaxation lengths, highlighting graphene's potential for spintronics applications.
Contribution
First experimental observation of spin transport and Larmor precession in single graphene layers at room temperature using non-local spin valve measurements.
Findings
Spin relaxation length of 1.5 to 2 microns at room temperature.
Spin signals are stable across temperatures from 4.2K to 300K.
Spin polarization of contacts around 10%.
Abstract
The specific band structure of graphene, with its unique valley structure and Dirac neutrality point separating hole states from electron states has led to the observation of new electronic transport phenomena such as anomalously quantized Hall effects, absence of weak localization and the existence of a minimum conductivity. In addition to dissipative transport also supercurrent transport has already been observed. It has also been suggested that graphene might be a promising material for spintronics and related applications, such as the realization of spin qubits, due to the low intrinsic spin orbit interaction, as well as the low hyperfine interaction of the electron spins with the carbon nuclei. As a first step in the direction of graphene spintronics and spin qubits we report the observation of spin transport, as well as Larmor spin precession over micrometer long distances using…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
