Strained topological insulator spin field effect transistor
Supriyo Bandyopadhyay

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel spin field effect transistor using a strained topological insulator channel, which modulates spin interference via strain-induced changes in energy dispersion, offering potential for energy-efficient applications.
Contribution
It introduces a new type of spin transistor that does not rely on spin-orbit interaction but uses strain to control spin interference in topological insulators.
Findings
Conductance on/off ratio is low, limiting switching applications.
Strain modifies Dirac velocity, affecting spin interference.
Potential use as an energy-efficient frequency multiplier.
Abstract
The notion of a spin field effect transistor, where transistor action is realized by manipulating the spin degree of freedom of charge carriers instead of the charge degree of freedom, has captivated researchers for at least three decades. These transistors are usually implemented by modulating the spin orbit interaction in a two- or one-dimensional semiconductor structure with an electrostatic potential, which then causes controlled spin precession in the transistor's channel that modulates the current flowing between two ferromagnetic (spin-polarized) source and drain contacts. Here, we introduce a new concept for a spin field effect transistor whose channel is made of a strained topological insulator (strained-topological-insulator-field-effect-transistor or STI-SPINFET), which does not exploit spin-orbit interaction. Instead, the transistor function is elicited by straining the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTopological Materials and Phenomena · Magnetic properties of thin films · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
