O.F. Schirmer, K.W. Blazey, et al.
Physical Review B
The nonlocal spin resistance is measured as a function of temperature in a Fe/GaAs spin-injection device. For nonannealed samples that show minority-spin injection, the spin resistance is observed up to room temperature and decays exponentially with temperature at a rate of 0.018 K-1. Postgrowth annealing at 440 K increases the spin signal at low temperatures but the decay rate also increases to 0.030 K-1. From measurements of the diffusion constant and the spin lifetime in the GaAs channel, we conclude that sample annealing modifies the temperature dependence of the spin-transfer efficiency at injection and detection contacts. Surprisingly, the spin-transfer efficiency increases in samples that exhibit minority-spin injection. © 2010 The American Physical Society.
O.F. Schirmer, K.W. Blazey, et al.
Physical Review B
Biancun Xie, Madhavan Swaminathan, et al.
EMC 2011
Gregory Czap, Kyungju Noh, et al.
APS Global Physics Summit 2025
S. Cohen, T.O. Sedgwick, et al.
MRS Proceedings 1983