Electric-field controlled spin reversal in a quantum dot with ferromagnetic contacts
J.R. Hauptmann, J. Paaske, P.E. Lindelof

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates electrical control of spin states in a carbon nanotube quantum dot with ferromagnetic contacts, enabling rapid and localized spin-reversal without external magnetic fields, advancing spintronic device development.
Contribution
It reports the experimental realization of electrically tunable spin-splitting in a quantum dot coupled to ferromagnetic electrodes, showing control over spin polarization via gate voltage.
Findings
Exchange-field can be compensated by an external magnetic field.
Gate voltage can reverse the local spin-polarization.
Kondo resonance used to read spin states.
Abstract
Manipulation of the spin-states of a quantum dot by purely electrical means is a highly desirable property of fundamental importance for the development of spintronic devices such as spin-filters, spin-transistors and single-spin memory as well as for solid-state qubits. An electrically gated quantum dot in the Coulomb blockade regime can be tuned to hold a single unpaired spin-1/2, which is routinely spin-polarized by an applied magnetic field. Using ferromagnetic electrodes, however, the properties of the quantum dot become directly spin-dependent and it has been demonstrated that the ferromagnetic electrodes induce a local exchange-field which polarizes the localized spin in the absence of any external fields. Here we report on the experimental realization of this tunneling-induced spin-splitting in a carbon nanotube quantum dot coupled to ferromagnetic nickel-electrodes. We study…
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