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Observation of oscillating g-factor anisotropy arising from strong crystal lattice anisotropy in GaAs spin-3/2 hole quantum point contacts

ORAL

Abstract

Many modern spin-based devices rely on the spin-orbit interaction, which is highly sensitive to the host semiconductor heterostructure and varies substantially depending on crystal direction, crystal asymmetry (Dresselhaus), and quantum confinement asymmetry (Rashba). One-dimensional quantum point contacts are a powerful tool to probe both energy and directional dependence of spin-orbit interaction through the effect on the hole g-factor. In this work we investigate the role of cubic crystal asymmetry in driving an oscillation in the in-plane hole g-factor anisotropy when the quantum point contact is rotated with respect to the crystal axes, and we are able to separate contributions to the Zeeman Hamiltonian arising from Rashba and cubic crystal asymmetry spin-orbit interactions. The in-plane g-factor is found to be extremely sensitive to the orientation of the quantum point contact, changing by a factor of 5 when rotated by 45°. This exceptionally strong crystal lattice anisotropy of the in-plane Zeeman splitting cannot be explained within axially symmetric theoretical models. Theoretical modelling based on the combined Luttinger, Rashba and Dresselhaus Hamiltonians that we use here reveals new spin-orbit contributions to the in-plane hole g-factor and provides an excellent agreement with our experimental data.

Publication: A. Srinivasan, K.L. Hudson et al., Observation of oscillating g-factor anisotropy arising from strong crystal lattice anisotropy in GaAs spin-3/2 hole quantum point contacts, in preparation for submission to Physical Review Letters.

Presenters

  • Karina L Hudson

    University of New South Wales

Authors

  • Karina L Hudson

    University of New South Wales

  • Ashwin Srinivasan

    UNSW Sydney

  • Dmitry Miserev

    University of Basel, Swizerland

  • Qingwen Wang

    UNSW Sydney, University of New South Wales

  • Oleh Klochan

    UNSW Sydney, University of New South Wales

  • Oleg P Sushkov

    University of New South Wales, UNSW Sydney

  • Ian Farrer

    University of Sheffield, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom, Sheffield University

  • David A Ritchie

    Univ of Cambridge, University of Cambridge

  • Alexander R Hamilton

    University of New South Wales