Induced spin filtering in electron transmission through chiral molecular layers adsorbed on metals with strong spin-orbit coupling
Joel Gersten, Kristen Kaasbjerg, Abraham Nitzan

TL;DR
This paper introduces the concept of induced spin filtering in electron transmission through chiral molecular layers on metals with strong spin-orbit coupling, explaining observed spin polarization effects.
Contribution
It proposes a new mechanism of spin filtering induced by orbital angular momentum selectivity, accounting for experimental observations on gold and silver substrates.
Findings
Spin polarization can be explained by induced spin filtering with strong spin-orbit coupling.
The model accounts for observations on gold and silver substrates.
Strong spin-orbit coupling at interfaces explains results on aluminum substrates.
Abstract
Recent observations of considerable spin polarization in photoemission from metal surfaces through monolayers of chiral molecules were followed by several efforts to rationalize the results as the effect of spin-orbit interaction that accompanies electronic motion on helical, or more generally strongly curved, potential surfaces. In this paper we (a) argue, using simple models, that motion in curved force-fields with the typical energies used and the characteristic geometry of DNA cannot account for such observations; (b) introduce the concept of induced spin filtering, whereupon selectivity in the transmission of the electron orbital angular momentum can induce spin selectivity in the transmission process provided there is strong spin-orbit coupling in the substrate; and (c) show that the spin polarizability in the tunneling current as well as the photoemission current from gold…
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