A conductive topological insulator with colossal spin Hall effect for ultra-low power spin-orbit-torque switching (1709.07684v2)
Abstract: Spin-orbit-torque (SOT) switching using the spin Hall effect (SHE) in heavy metals and topological insulators (TIs) has great potential for ultra-low power magnetoresistive random-access memory (MRAM). To be competitive with conventional spin-transfer-torque (STT) switching, a pure spin current source with large spin Hall angle (${\theta}{SH}$ > 1) and high electrical conductivity (${\sigma} > 105 {\Omega}{-1}m{-1}$) is required. Here, we demonstrate such a pure spin current source: BiSb thin films with ${\sigma}{\sim}2.5*105 {\Omega}{-1}m{-1}$, ${\theta}{SH}{\sim}52$, and spin Hall conductivity ${\sigma}{SH}{\sim}1.3*107 {\hbar}/2e{\Omega}{-1}m{-1}$ at room temperature. We show that BiSb thin films can generate a colossal spin-orbit field of 2770 Oe/(MA/cm$2$) and a critical switching current density as low as 1.5 MA/cm$2$ in Bi${0.9}$Sb$_{0.1}$ / MnGa bi-layers. BiSb is the best candidate for the first industrial application of topological insulators.
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