Half-Metal Spin-Gapless Semiconductor Junctions as a Route to the Ideal Diode
E. \c{S}a\c{s}{\i}o\u{g}lu, T. Aull, D. Kutschabsky, S. Bl\"ugel, I., Mertig

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel diode design using half-metallic magnets and spin-gapless semiconductors that achieves zero threshold voltage, linear I-V characteristics, and high current drive capability, overcoming limitations of traditional diodes.
Contribution
It introduces a new diode concept based on HMM-SGS junctions with spin-dependent transport, eliminating the junction barrier and threshold voltage.
Findings
HMM-SGS junctions act as diodes with zero threshold voltage
The diode exhibits linear I-V characteristics and high on/off ratio at zero temperature
Finite temperature effects introduce leakage currents reducing the ideal diode performance
Abstract
The ideal diode is a theoretical concept that completely conducts the electric current under forward bias without any loss and that behaves like a perfect insulator under reverse bias. However, real diodes have a junction barrier that electrons have to overcome and thus they have a threshold voltage , which must be supplied to the diode to turn it on. This threshold voltage gives rise to power dissipation in the form of heat and hence is an undesirable feature. In this work, based on half-metallic magnets and spin-gapless semiconductors we propose a diode concept that does not have a junction barrier and the operation principle of which relies on the spin-dependent transport properties of the HMM and SGS materials. We show that the HMM and SGS materials form an Ohmic contact under any finite forward bias, while for a reverse bias the current is blocked due to spin-dependent…
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