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PHYSICAL REVIEW B 73, 081303共R兲 共2006兲
Off-Fermi surface cancellation effects in spin-Hall conductivity of a two-dimensional Rashba electron gas C. Grimaldi,1,2 E. Cappelluti,3,4 and F. Marsiglio2,5 1LPM,
Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Station 17, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland 2 DPMC, Université de Genève, 24 Quai Ernest-Ansermet, CH-1211 Genève 4, Switzerland 3Istituto dei Sistemi Complessi, CNR-INFM, via dei Taurini 19, 00185 Roma, Italy 4Dipartimento di Fisica, Università “La Sapienza,” Piazzale Aldo Moro 2, 00185 Roma, Italy 5Department of Physics, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada T6G 2J1 共Received 9 December 2005; revised manuscript received 13 January 2006; published 6 February 2006兲 We calculate the spin-Hall conductivity of a disordered two-dimensional Rashba electron gas within the self-consistent Born approximation and for arbitrary values of the electron density, parametrized by the ratio EF / E0, where EF is the Fermi level and E0 is the spin-orbit energy. We confirm earlier results indicating that in the limit EF / E0 Ⰷ 1 the vertex corrections suppress the spin-Hall conductivity. However, for sufficiently low electron density such that EF ⱗ E0, we find that the vertex corrections no longer cancel the contribution arising from the Fermi surface, and they cannot therefore suppress the spin current. This is instead achieved by contributions away from the Fermi surface, disregarded in earlier studies, which become large when EF ⱗ E0. DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.73.081303
PACS number共s兲: 72.25.⫺b, 72.10.⫺d, 72.20.Dp
The spin-Hall effect, i.e., the generation of a spinpolarized current transverse to the direction of an applied external electric field, has recently raised considerable interest in view of its possible application in spintronics. Alongside the extrinsic spin-Hall effect,1 generated by the spinorbit 共SO兲 coupling to impurities and defects, much theoretical effort has been devoted to the intrinsic spin-Hall effect arising from the one-particle band structure of spinorbit coupled systems.2,3 The initial claim that for a twodimensional 共2D兲 electron gas subject to the Rashba SO coupling the intrinsic spin-Hall conductivity, sH, is a universal constant 共sH = 兩e兩 / 8,3 where e is the electron charge兲 has been shown to be invalid even for an arbitrarily small concentration of impurities, which reduce sH to zero.4–8 At the same time, however, for other models of SO coupling such as, for example, the three-dimensional 共3D兲 Dresselhaus model,9 the Luttinger model for valence band holes,10 or generalized Rashba models taking into account nonlinear momentum dependences of the SO interaction11–13 or a nonquadratic unperturbed band spectrum,14 sH has been found to be robust against nonmagnetic impurity scatterings. This suggests that the vanishing of sH is a peculiar feature of the linear Rashba model. This is also supported by rather general arguments that do not rely on the specific scattering process.7,15 Within the linear response theory, the vanishing of sH in the Rashba model has been ascribed to a cancellation effect of the spin-dependent part of the ladder current vertex in the Born approximation for impurity scattering.4,5,7,8 This cancellation basically follows from the fact that, as long as the Fermi energy EF is much larger than the spin-orbit energy E0, the factor −1 associated with the current vertex 共where is the electron lifetime due to impurities兲 is balanced by the factor arising from the product of two Green’s functions appearing in the current vertex kernel. However, similarly to what happens for other properties 共e.g., the conductivity in impure metals兲, such kinds of balance effects are usually peculiar to the assumption that EF is the largest energy scale 1098-0121/2006/73共8兲/081303共4兲/$23.00
of the problem, and one may wonder if the cancellation mechanism based on the vertex function described in Refs. 4, 5, 7, and 8 is still valid when EF is comparable with E0. The clarification of this issue is important not only to assess the role of vertex corrections in a general context, but it is also quite crucial in view of the recent progress made in fabricating systems with large SO couplings for which the EF Ⰷ E0 approximation may not be appropriate. Examples of such large SO systems are, among others, HgTe quantum wells,16 the surface states of metals and semimetals,17,18 and even the heavy Fermion superconductor CePt3Si.19 However the most striking example is provided by bismuth/silver 共111兲 surface alloys displaying quadratic unperturbed bands split by a Rashba energy of about E0 = 220 meV.20 In this system the Fermi energy can be tuned by doping with lead atoms in such a way that EF may be larger or lower than E0.20,21 In this paper we investigate the spin-Hall conductivity in the Born approximation of impurity scattering and for arbitrary values of EF / E0. We find that, apart from the high density limit EF / E0 → ⬁, the spin-dependent part of the vertex function is generally not zero, and increases as EF / E0 decreases, eventually reaching unity as EF → 0. In this situation, the spin-Hall conductivity sH would be nonzero if calculated along the lines of Refs. 4, 5, 7, and 8, in contradiction with the general arguments of Refs. 7 and 15. We resolve this inconsistency by showing that sH is actually canceled by the contributions away from the Fermi surface, which have a magnitude equal to those on the Fermi surface, but opposite in sign. We consider a 2D Rashba electron gas whose Hamiltonian is H=
ប 2k 2 + ␥共kxy − kyx兲, 2m
共1兲
where m is the electron mass, k is the electron wave number, and ␥ is the SO coupling. The corresponding electron dispersion consists of two branches Esk = ប2共k + sk0兲2 / 2m where s
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C. GRIMALDI, E. CAPPELLUTI, AND F. MARSIGLIO
= ± 1 is the helicity number and k0 = m␥ / ប2. In the following, we parametrize the SO interaction by the Rashba energy E0 = ប2k20 / 2m that, for a clean system, corresponds to the minimum interband excitation energy for an electron at the bottom of the lower 共s = −1兲 band. For simplicity, we consider a short-ranged impurity potential of the form V共r兲 = Vimp兺i␦共r − Ri兲, where the summation is performed over random positions Ri of the impurity scatterers with density ni. The corresponding electron Green’s function is a 2 ⫻ 2 matrix in the spin space, G共k,in兲 =
1 兺 关1 + s共kˆxy − kˆyx兲兴Gs共k,in兲, 2 s=±
=
1 2N0
冕
1 兺 4N0 s=±
dk kGs共k,in兲, 2
→0
Im Ksc共 + i␦兲
1 B2共il,in兲 k0 . ⌫y共il,in兲 = 8N0 − B3共il,in兲
B1共il,in兲 =
冕
dk 2 k 兺 sG−s共k,il兲Gs共k,in兲, 2 s
共9兲
B2共il,in兲 =
冕
dk 2 k 兺 sGs共k,il兲Gs共k,in兲, 2 s
共10兲
冕
dk k 兺 Gs共k,il兲Gs⬘共k,in兲. 2 s,s
共11兲
B3共il,in兲 =
⬘
At this point, the analytical continuation to the real axis, im → + i␦, can be performed by following the usual steps,22 leading to
共4兲
T 兺 K共in + im,in兲 → − n
n
冕
−
1 2N0
冕
−⬁
共6兲
where jxc共k兲 = evx共k兲 = eបkx / m + e␥y / ប is the bare charge current. Equation 共6兲 can be rewritten as Jxc共k , il , in兲 = eបkx / m + e␥⌫共il , in兲 / ប where ⌫ represents the SO corrections to the charge current function. By using Eq. 共2兲 and by taking advantage of the momentum independence of ⌺, the correlation function Ksc reduces to
d⑀ 关f共⑀ + 兲 − f共⑀兲兴 2
冕
⬁
d⑀ 关f共⑀ + 兲 + f共⑀兲兴 2
⫻Im K共⑀ + + i␦, ⑀ + i␦兲,
共5兲
dk⬘ G共k⬘,il兲 共2兲2
⫻Jxc共k⬘,il,in兲G共k⬘,in兲,
⬁
−⬁
Here jsy共k兲 = 兵Sz , vy共k兲其 / 2 = ប2kyz / 2m is the current operator in the y direction for spins polarized along z and Jxc is the vertex function for charge current along the x direction. In the Born approximation for impurity scattering, Jxc satisfies the following ladder equation: Jxc共k,il,in兲 = jxc共k兲 +
冕
⫻Im K共⑀ + + i␦, ⑀ − i␦兲
dk Tr关jsy共k兲G共k,in + im兲 共2兲2
⫻Jxc共k,in + im,in兲G共k,in兲兴.
共8兲
In Eqs. 共7兲 and 共8兲 the functions B1, B2, and B3 are
where Ksc is the spin-current–charge-current correlation function given by Ksc共im兲 = T 兺
共7兲
8N0 +
2 = 2niVimp N0 / ប
sH = − lim
eប2␥ T 兺 K共in + im,in兲 4m n
where ⌫y is the component of ⌫ proportional to y, ⌫y = Tr共y⌫兲 / 2, which, by using Eq. 共6兲, becomes
共3兲
is the scattering rate for a 2D elecwhere tron gas with zero SO interaction and density of states N0 = m / 2ប2 per spin direction. The spin-Hall conductivity is obtained from −1
⬅i
dk G共k,in兲 共2兲2
冕
eប2␥ T 兺 ⌫y共in + im,in兲 4m n
⫻B1共in + im,in兲
共2兲
where Gs共k , in兲−1 = in − Esk + − ⌺共in兲 is the electron propagator in the helicity basis, is the chemical potential, n = 共2n + 1兲T is the Matsubara frequency where T is the temperature, and ⌺共in兲 is the impurity self-energy in the self-consistent Born approximation, ⌺共in兲 =
Ksc共im兲 = i
共12兲 where f共x兲 = 1 / 关exp共x / T兲 + 1兴 is the Fermi distribution function. When the spin-Hall conductivity is evaluated via Eq. 共4兲, it is clear that the resulting sH will be given by the sum RA RR and sH , respectively, defined as of two contributions, sH the first and second line in the right-hand side of Eq. 共12兲, and characterized by different combinations of retarded 共R兲 and advanced 共A兲 Green’s functions 共see below兲. The first RA , contains in the limit → 0 the term df共⑀兲 / d⑀ term, sH which, for T = 0, restricts all quasiparticle contributions to the Fermi surface. The second term instead has an integral containing f共⑀兲, therefore allowing for processes away from the Fermi surface. In Refs. 4, 5, 7, and 8 this term has been disregarded because in the large EF limit it scales as E0 / 共EF2 兲,4,7 and the spin-Hall conductivity has been approxiRA mated by the sH contribution alone, which at zero temperature reduces to
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OFF-FERMI SURFACE CANCELLATION EFFECTS IN…
RA sH =−
eប2␥ RA ⌫ 8m y
冕
dk 2 R k 兺 sG−s 共k,0兲GsA共k,0兲. 共13兲 2 s
Here GsR共A兲 is the retarded 共advanced兲 Green’s function and ⌫RA y = ⌫ y 共0 + i␦ , 0 − i␦兲 is the ladder vertex function 共8兲 calculated at il = i␦ and in = −i␦. By assuming that the SO energy E0 is negligible with respect to EF, then the self-energy 共3兲 can be approximated as ⌺R共兲 = −i / 2,22 and the bubble term B2 defined in Eq. 共10兲 reduces to B2共i␦ , −i␦兲 = −8N0k0, which by using Eq. 共8兲 leads to ⌫RA y = 0. This is the vertex cancellation mechanism pointed out in Refs. 4, 5, 7, and 8. We reexamine now Eq. 共13兲 by relaxing the hypothesis EF Ⰷ E0. For practical purposes, we introduce an upper momentum cutoff kc such that all the relevant momentum and energy scales are much smaller than the corresponding cutoff quantities, namely k0 , kF Ⰶ kc, EF , E0 , 1 / Ⰶ Ec = ប2k2c / 2m. After the analytical continuation, the integration over momenta in Eq. 共3兲 can be performed analytically and the real axis self-energy is evaluated numerically by iteration. The RA obtained ⌺ is then substituted into ⌫RA y and sH , Eq. 共13兲, whose momentum integration allows for an analytical evaluation due to the momentum independence of ⌺. To explore the effect of varying EF on the spin-Hall conductivity, we have first evaluated the Green’s functions at a fixed number electron density n, where n = 2 共n = 0兲 means that all states below the cut-off energy Ec are filled 共empty兲, and subsequently the corresponding EF for a given n has been extracted from n=
1 2Ec
冕
⬁
−⬁
d f共兲 兺 s
N s共 兲 , N0
共14兲
where Ns共兲 = −共1 / 兲 兰 dk / 2k Im GsR共k , 兲 is the density of states for the interacting system and f共兲 = 共−兲 at zero temperature. In Fig. 1共a兲 we report the SO vertex function ⌫RA y as a function of EF and for several values of the SO energy E0 ranging from E0 = 0.8 up to E0 = 4 共from bottom to top兲. The coupling to the impurity potential has been set equal to Ec = 80 in all cases. The corresponding values of the number electron density n as a function of EF of the interacting system are plotted in the inset of Fig. 1共a兲. For EF ⯝ 10, the Fermi energy EF is sufficiently large compared to E0 and ⌫RA y is negligibly small, confirming the results reported in Refs. 4, 5, 7, and 8. However, as EF is decreased, ⌫RA y increases monotonically up to ⌫RA y ⯝ 1 for EF / E0 ⯝ 0. In these circumstances, therefore, the vertex cancellation mechanism is no longer active, and the corresponding spin-Hall conductivity RA sH is expected to be nonzero. This is indeed shown in Fig. RA , Eq. 共13兲, is plotted in units of 兩e兩 / 8 as a 1共b兲 where sH RA is due to function of EF. The nonmonotonic behavior of sH RA the competition between the increase of ⌫y shown in Fig. 1共a兲 and the decrease of the integral appearing in Eq. 共13兲 as EF → 0. A nonvanishing spin-Hall conductivity in an impure 2D Rashba electron gas is at odds with the general arguments of Refs. 7 and 15, where sH has been shown to be zero for any spin-conserving momentum scattering, independently of the
FIG. 1. 共a兲 Spin-orbit vertex function ⌫RA y as a function of EF for different values of the spin-orbit energy E0. The scattering time has been set equal to = 80/ Ec, where Ec is the upper energy cutoff 共see text兲. Inset: number electron density n of the interacting RA system as a function of EF. 共b兲 The retarded-advanced part sH of the spin-Hall conductivity in units of 兩e兩 / 8 obtained from Eq. 共13兲 for the same parameter values of 共a兲.
ratio E0 / EF. However, as already pointed out above, the physical spin-Hall response is not entirely defined by Eq. 共13兲, but should also include the contributions away from the Fermi surface given by the second term in the right-hand RA RR + sH , where side of Eq. 共12兲. Hence sH = sH RR sH =
eប2␥ Im 4m ⫻
冕
冕
⬁
d⑀ f共⑀兲⌫RR y 共⑀兲
−⬁
R 共k, ⑀兲 R dG−s dk 2 k 兺s Gs 共k, ⑀兲, d⑀ 2 s
共15兲
and ⌫RR y 共⑀兲 = ⌫ y 共⑀ + i␦ , ⑀ + i␦兲. RR Our numerical calculations of sH , Eq. 共15兲, are plotted in RA Fig. 2 共dashed lines兲 together with the corresponding sH RR results already plotted in Fig. 1共b兲. For all EF / E0 values, sH RA has the same magnitude of sH but with opposite sign, so RA that the resulting physical spin-Hall conductivity, sH = sH RR + sH 共gray lines兲 reduces to zero within the accuracy of our numerical calculations. The results plotted in Fig. 2 clearly demonstrate that, generally, a correct evaluation of the spin-Hall conductivity must take into account the contributions 共15兲 away from the Fermi surface, resolving therefore the concerns expressed in Ref. 11 about an only-on-Fermi-surface cancellation mechanism.
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C. GRIMALDI, E. CAPPELLUTI, AND F. MARSIGLIO
FIG. 2. The different cotributions to the spin-Hall conductivity RA RR for the same parameters of Fig. 1: sH 共solid lines兲, sH 共dashed RA RR lines兲, and the physical spin-Hall conductivity sH = sH + sH 共gray lines兲. All conductivities are given in units of 兩e兩 / 8.
However, on this point, a few remarks should be brought to RA RR and sH sugattention. First, the cancellation between sH gests that, by suitable mathematical transformations, the 共nominal兲 off-Fermi surface contribution 共15兲 may be exRA , resulting in a cancellation mechanism that pressed as −sH is, after all, a Fermi surface property. However, we have been unable to find such a transformation. A second possiRR is generally a genuine off-Fermi surface bility is that sH quantity, but that, accidentally, for the model Hamiltonian of RA . In this Eq. 共1兲, such a term is quantitatively equal to −sH case, any variation from the linear Rashba model of 共1兲 RA RR and sH terms that do not mutually canwould result in sH cel, leading to a nonzero spin-Hall conductivity. In this respect, one should note that, in fact, the general arguments of Refs. 7 and 15 about the vanishing of sH apply only for model Hamiltonians of the type 共1兲.
I. Dyakonov and V. I. Perel, JETP Lett. 13, 467 共1971兲. S. Murakami, N. Nagaosa, and S.-C. Zhang, Science 301, 1348 共2003兲. 3 J. Sinova, D. Culcer, Q. Niu, N. A. Sinitsyn, T. Jungwirth, and A. H. MacDonald, Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 126603 共2004兲. 4 P. Schwab and R. Raimondi, Eur. Phys. J. B 25, 483 共2002兲; R. Raimondi and P. Schwab, Phys. Rev. B 71, 033311 共2005兲. 5 J.-I. Inoue, G. E. W. Bauer, and L. W. Molenkamp, Phys. Rev. B 70, 041303共R兲 共2004兲. 6 E. G. Mishchenko, A. V. Shytov, and B. I. Halperin, Phys. Rev. Lett. 93, 226602 共2004兲. 7 O. V. Dimitrova, Phys. Rev. B 71, 245327 共2005兲. 8 O. Chalaev and D. Loss, Phys. Rev. B 71, 245318 共2005兲. 9 A. G. Malshukov and K. A. Chao, Phys. Rev. B 71, 121308共R兲 共2005兲. 10 S. Murakami, Phys. Rev. B 69, 241202共R兲 共2004兲. 11 K. Nomura, J. Sinova, N. A. Sinitsyn, and A. H. MacDonald, Phys. Rev. B 72, 165316 共2005兲. 12 A. V. Shytov, E. G. Mishchenko, H.-A. Engel, and B. I. Halperin, cond-mat/0509702 共unpublished兲.
Before concluding, it is worth stressing that the results presented in this work could be relevant also for systems described by nonlinear Rashba or 3D Dresselhaus SO couplings, or by nonquadratic unperturbed electronic band structures. It is known that for such systems, the spin-Hall conductivity in the presence of momentum scattering is nonzero also for EF / E0 → ⬁ because the SO vertex does not vanish.9–14 Our results suggest, however, that even in this case, for finite EF / E0, a quantitatively reliable calculation of sH should take into account also the off-Fermi surface contributions. This could be for example the case of the system studied in Ref. 18 where EF is of the same order as E0 and the unperturbed band spectrum is clearly nonquadratic. In conclusion, we have calculated the spin-Hall conductivity sH for a 2D electron gas subjected to the linear Rashba SO coupling in the Born approximation for impurity scattering. We have shown that, apart from the EF → ⬁ limit, the spin-dependent part of the vertex function is nonzero and increases as EF → 0, leading to nonzero Fermi surface conRA to the spin-Hall conductivity. We have demontribution sH strated that the physical spin-Hall conductivity sH actually includes also contributions away from the Fermi surface, RR sH , which are as large as those on the Fermi surface, but of opposite sign, leading to a vanishing sH for arbitrary values of EF / E0. We expect that, given the arguments of Refs. 7 and RA RR and sH for EF ⬍ ⬁ holds 15, the mutual cancellation of sH true also beyond the self-consistent Born approximation employed here. The authors acknowledge fruitful discussions with Marco Grioni and Roberto Raimondi. 共FM兲: The hospitality of the Department of Condensed Matter Physics at the University of Geneva is greatly appreciated. This work was supported in part by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada 共NSERC兲, by ICORE 共Alberta兲, by the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research 共CIAR兲, and by the University of Geneva.
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1 M.
13 A.
2
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