Spin-Seebeck effect on the surface of topological insulator due to nonequilibrium spin-polarization parallel to the direction of thermally driven electronic transport
Abstract: We study the transverse spin-Seebeck effect (SSE) on the surface of a three-dimensional topological insulator (TI) thin film, such as Bi$2$Se$_3$, which is sandwiched between two normal metal leads. The temperature bias $\Delta T$ applied between the leads generates surface charge current which becomes spin-polarized due to strong spin-orbit coupling on the TI surface, with polarization vector acquiring a component $P_x \simeq 60%$ {\em parallel to the direction of transport}. When the third nonmagnetic voltage probe is attached to the portion of the TI surface across its width $L_y$, pure spin current will be injected into the probe where the inverse spin Hall effect (ISHE) converts it into a voltage signal \mbox{$|V\mathrm{ISHE}|\mathrm{max}/\Delta T \simeq 2.5$ $\mu$V/K} (assuming the SH angle of Pt voltage probe and $L_y=1$ mm). The existence of predicted nonequilibrium spin-polarization parallel to the direction of electronic transport and the corresponding electron-driven SSE crucially relies on orienting quintuple layers (QLs) of Bi$_2$Se$_3$ {\em orthogonal} to the TI surface and {\em tilted} by $45\circ$ with respect to the direction of transport. Our analysis is based on the Landauer-B\"{u}ttiker-type formula for spin currents in the leads of a multi-terminal quantum-coherent junction, which is constructed using nonequilibrium Green function formalism within which we show how to take into account arbitrary orientation of QLs via the self-energy describing coupling between semi-infinite normal metal leads and TI.
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