Macroscopic transverse drift of long current-induced spin coherence
/ Authors
/ Abstract
We imaged the transport of a current-induced spin coherence in a two-dimensional electron gas confined in a triple quantum well. Nonlocal Kerr rotation measurements, based on the optical resonant amplification of the electrically-induced polarization, revealed a large spatial variation of the electron g-factor and the efficient generation of a current-controlled spin-orbit field in a macroscopic Hall bar device. We observed coherence times in the nanoseconds range transported beyond half-millimeter distances in a direction transverse to the applied electric field. The measured long spin transport length can be explained by two material properties: large mean free path for charge diffusion in clean systems, and enhanced spin-orbit coefficients in the triple well.
Journal: arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics