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American Physical Society, Physical review B, 4(86)

DOI: 10.1103/physrevb.86.045215

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Optical effects of spin currents in semiconductors

Journal article published in 2012 by Jing Wang, Sheng-Nan Ji, Bang-Fen Zhu, Ren-Bao Liu ORCID
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

A spin current has novel linear and second-order nonlinear optical effects due to its symmetry properties. With the symmetry analysis and the eight-band microscopic calculation we have systematically investigated the interaction between a spin current and a polarized light beam (or the "photon spin current") in direct-gap semiconductors. This interaction is rooted in the intrinsic spin-orbit coupling in valence bands and does not rely on the Rashba or Dresselhaus effect. The light-spin current interaction results in an optical birefringence effect of the spin current. The symmetry analysis indicates that in a semiconductor with inversion symmetry, the linear birefringence effect vanishes and only the circular birefringence effect exists. The circular birefringence effect is similar to the Faraday rotation in magneto-optics but involves no net magnetization nor breaking the time-reversal symmetry. Moreover, a spin current can induce the second-order nonlinear optical processes due to the inversion-symmetry breaking. These findings form a basis of measuring a pure spin current where and when it flows with the standard optical spectroscopy, which may provide a toolbox to explore a wealth of physics connecting the spintronics and photonics. ; Comment: 16 pages, 7 figs