We are a theoretical Condensed Matter group at the University of Regensburg with a special research focus on understanding Spin(Elec)tronics phenomena in nanoscale systems. Our current research activities comprise first-principles descriptions of the electronic properties and spin interactions of two-dimensional (magnetic) van-der-Waals multilayers, spin-orbit torques, excitons, as well as spin and transport properties of magnetic superconducting tunnel junctions including the recently intensively investigated supercurrent diode effect.
Our group (with Master student Sareh Bazyar, right) in October 2024
: RECENT RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS :
The lacking mirror symmetry in chiral materials – e.g., in twisted van-der-Waals homobilayers – can rise unconventional spin-orbit fields such as fully momentum-aligned radial Rashba fields.
After predicting this novel radial Rashba spin-orbit coupling from first-principles calculations and performing large-scale magnetotransport calculations for proximitized graphene (see below), we studied the Cooper-pair transfer in vertical superconductor/ferromagnet/superconductor Josephson junctions that host "crossed" (tangential and radial) Rashba fields at their interfaces. We unraveled that their interplay results in what we call the unconventional supercurrent diode effect (SDE) with maximal supercurrent rectification when the magnetization of the ferromagnetic link is collinear with the supercurrent (instead of perpendicular as in the conventional SDE). We showed that the microscopic origin of the unconventional SDE – spin precessions inside the ferromagnet – is well distinct from the Rashba-induced effects on Cooper-pair momenta in the conventional SDE, making it a particularly sensitive probe of interfacial chiral spin textures.
This work has been published in arXiv:2411.11570.
Graphene-based van-der-Waals heterostructures offer unprecedented possibilities to engineer the proximity-induced spin-orbit fields through knobs like stacking, twisting, or gating, and might therefore provide an ideal platform to induce new unconventional types of spin-orbit coupling such as the chiral radial Rashba fields recently proposed by first-principles calculations performed in our group (see below).
In this work, we performed large-scale magnetotransport calculations based on the KWANT package to investigate transverse magnetic focusing and Dyakonov–Perel spin relaxation in proximitized graphene. Our results guide to practical experimental signatures to disentangle radial from conventional (tangential) Rashba and/or Dresselhaus spin-orbit coupling. Moreover, we demonstrated that a radial Rashba component in a two-dimensional electron gas will impose a characteristic magnetization-angle shift on the superconducting-diode-effect efficiency, allowing us to determine the so-called Rashba angle and thereby quantify the amount of radial Rashba coupling in these "crossed" spin-orbit fields.
This work has been published in Physical Review Letters.
Combining sophisticated simulations and theoretical models, we discovered that we can electrically control the electronic behavior of Bernal bilayer graphene sandwiched between magnetic Cr2Ge2Te6 and strong spin-orbit-coupling-inducing WS2 layers to explore a wide range of correlated phases within a single system. Our research opens up novel possibilities to design such advanced EX-SO-tic van-der-Waals devices with tunable properties, simultaneously exploiting magnetic exchange (EX) and spin-orbit coupling (SO).
This work has been published in Physical Review B .
From first-principles calculations, we investigated the functional form of the spin-orbit fields that emerge in twisted van-der-Waals heterostructures consisting of graphene and WSe2 multilayers. We proposed that the Rashba spin-orbit fields of these structures can be electrically tuned from the conventional – tangential to momentum – to a predominantly radial – parallel to momentum – spin texture. Such spin-orbit engineering could be useful to design spin-charge-conversion and spin-orbit-torque schemes, as well as for controlling correlated phases and superconductivity in van-der-Waals materials.
This work has been published in Physical Review B as Editors' Suggestion.
In collaboration with our experimental colleagues in Regensburg, we further investigated the supercurrent diode effect in two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) Josephson junctions. We simultaneously explored the φ0-shift (anomalous Josephson effect) and the supercurrent diode effect in the same system using a superconducting quantum interferometer. Electrostatic gating of the junction revealed a direct connection between the φ0-shift and the diode effect. Our findings suggest that spin-orbit interaction plays, together with a Zeeman field, a crucial role for the supercurrent diode effect to appear.
This work has been published in Nature Communications.
In collaboration with Dr. Denis Kochan from the Slovak Academy of Sciences in Bratislava, we studied the impact of proximity-induced spin-orbit (through proximity to a transition-metal dichalcogenide; TMDC) and exchange coupling (through proximity to CGT) on rhombohedral trilayer graphene. We identified a rich spectrum of correlated phases that originate, e.g., from valley–Zeeman coupling, and also unraveled a magnetocorrelation effect, which causes a strong sensitivity of the correlated phases to the relative magnetization orientations (parallel or antiparallel) of the proximitizing ferromagnetic (CGT) layers.
This work has been published in Physical Review Letters.
In an international collaboration, we investigated the control of the valley and excitonic properties of van-der-Waals heterostructures composed of two-dimensional transition-metal dichalcogenides (MoSe2) and magnetic materials (CrSBr) exploiting proximity effects. We found a clear impact of the magnetic order of CrSBr on the optical properties of MoSe2, the exciton and trion energies, and a valley g-factor reflecting asymmetric magnetic proximity interaction. Our first-principles calculations furthermore indicated that MoSe2/CrSBr forms a broken-gap band alignment and supports charge transfer.
This work has been published in Nano Letters.
In collaboration with experimental colleagues from RWTH Aachen and Forschungszentrum Jülich, we employed first-principles calculations to model the electronic properties and spin-orbit coupling of bilayer graphene encapsulated by hexagonal boron-nitride (hBN). We extracted the spin-orbit coupling parameters fitting the computed band structures to a model Hamiltonian and furthermore studied the impact of twisting.
This work has been published in Physical Review B.
After the first realization of a supercurrent diode based on two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) Josephson junctions in the group of Prof. Dr. Christoph Strunk/Dr. Nicola Paradiso at UR, which we supported with theoretical calculations (Ref. 1, Ref. 2), we demonstrate in a recent work – again in close collaboration with our experimental colleagues – the peculiar role of 0–π-like transitions for the reversal (sign change) of both the supercurrent diode effect and the magnetochiral anisotropy. Our findings provide an important contribution to establish supercurrent diodes as the dissipationless counterparts of present-day semiconductor diodes and as essential building blocks of future electronic devices.
This work has been published in Nature Nanotechnology and Physical Review B.
The UR press release can be found here.
Based on first-principles calculations, we characterized proximity effects occurring at the interfaces between the van-der-Waals material WS2 and graphene. We fitted the obtained bandstructures to an analytical model Hamiltonian and extracted the g-factors of the bilayer, suggesting a clear enhancement of the valley Zeeman effect due to proximity.
This work has been published in 2D Materials.
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