Giant chirality-induced spin-selectivity of polarons
Dan Klein, Karen Michaeli

TL;DR
This paper reveals a new energy scale for the chirality-induced spin selectivity (CISS) effect in organic molecules, showing that polaron fluctuations significantly influence spin-dependent transport phenomena at room temperature.
Contribution
It demonstrates that polaron fluctuations introduce a new energy scale for CISS, enhancing understanding of spin transport in chiral organic systems at room temperature.
Findings
Polaron fluctuations are crucial for CISS manifestations.
A new energy scale for CISS emerges in polaronic transport.
Room temperature CISS effects exceed typical spin-orbit coupling energies.
Abstract
The chirality-induced spin selectivity (CISS) effect gives rise to strongly spin-dependent transport through many organic molecules and structures. Its discovery raises fascinating fundamental questions as well as the prospect of possible applications. The basic phenomenology, a strongly asymmetric magnetoresistance despite the absence of magnetism, is now understood to result from the combination of spin-orbit coupling and chiral geometry. However, experimental signatures of electronic helicity were observed at room temperature, i.e., at an energy scale that exceeds the typical spin-orbit coupling in organic systems by several orders of magnitude. This work shows that a new energy scale for CISS emerges for currents carried by polarons, i.e., in the presence of strong electron-phonon coupling. In particular, we found that polaron fluctuations play a crucial role in the two…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMolecular Junctions and Nanostructures · Magnetism in coordination complexes · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
