Spin injection into Pt-polymers with large spin-orbit coupling
ORAL
Abstract
Organic spintronics has entered a new era of devices that integrate organic light-emitting diodes (OLED) in organic spin valve (OSV) geometry (dubbed bipolar organic spin valve, or spin-OLED), for actively manipulating the device electroluminescence via the spin alignment of two ferromagnetic electrodes (\textit{Science} \textbf{337}, 204-209, 2012; \textit{Appl. Phys. Lett}. 103, 042411, 2013). Organic semiconductors that contain heavy metal elements have been widely used as phosphorescent dopants in white-OLEDs. However such active materials are detrimental for OSV operation due to their large spin-orbit coupling (SOC) that may limit the spin diffusion length and thus spin-OLED based on organics with large SOC is a challenge. We report the successful fabrication of OSVs based on pi-conjugated polymers which contain intrachain Platinum atoms (dubbed Pt-polymers). Spin injection into the Pt-polymers is investigated by the giant magnetoresistance (GMR) effect as a function of bias voltage, temperature and polymer layer thickness. From the GMR bias voltage dependence we infer that the ``impendence mismatch'' between ferromagnetic electrodes and Pt-polymer may be suppressed due to the large SOC.
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Authors
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Dali Sun
University of Utah
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Ryan McLaughlin
University of Utah
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Gene Siegel
University of Utah
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Ashutosh Tiwari
University of Utah
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Z. Valy Vardeny
Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Utah, University of Utah