Spin-polarizing electron beam splitter from crossed graphene nanoribbons
DOI10.5281/zenodo.7741572Zenodo7741572MaRDI QIDQ6723901FDOQ6723901
Dataset published at Zenodo repository.
Brandbyge, Sofia Sanz, Sánchez-Portal, Papior, Géza Giedke, Thomas Frederiksen
Publication date: 11 July 2022
Copyright license: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
OPEN DATA related to the research publication: S. Sanz, N. Papior, G. Giedke, D. Snchez-Portal, M. Brandbyge, and T. Frederiksen,Spin-polarizing electron beam splitter from crossed graphene nanoribbons,Phys. Rev. Lett. 129, 037701 (2022)[arXiv:2201.07147] Abstract: Junctions composed of two crossed graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) have been theoretically proposed as electron beam splitters where incoming electron waves in one GNR can be split coherently into propagating waves in two outgoing terminals with nearly equal amplitude and zero back-scattering. Here we scrutinize this effect for devices composed of narrow zigzag GNRs taking explicitly into account the role of Coulomb repulsion that leads to spin-polarized edge states within mean-field theory. We show that the beam-splitting effect survives the opening of the well-known correlation gap and, more strikingly, that a spin-dependent scattering potential emerges which spin polarizes the transmitted electrons in the two outputs. By studying different ribbons and intersection angles we provide evidence that this is a general feature with edge-polarized nanoribbons. A near-perfect polarization can be achieved by joining several junctions in series. Our findings suggest that GNRs are interesting building blocks in spintronics and quantum technologies with applications for interferometry and entanglement.
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