Orbitronics: Energy-efficient Alternative to Electronics

Orbital angular momentum monopoles have been the subject of great theoretical interest as they offer major practical advantages for the emerging field of orbitronics, a potential energy-efficient alternative to traditional electronics. Now, through a combination of robust theory and experiments at the Swiss Light Source SLS at Paul Scherrer Institute PSI, their existence has been demonstrated.

Whereas electronics uses the charge of the electron to transfer information, technology of the future with less environmental impact might use a different property of electrons to process information. Until recently, the main contender for a different type of ‘tronics’ has been spintronics. Here, the property used to transfer information is the spin of the electron.

Researchers are also exploring the possibility of using the orbital angular momentum (OAM) of electrons orbiting their atomic nucleus: an emerging field known as orbitronics. This field holds great promise for memory devices, particularly because a large magnetisation could potentially be generated with relatively small charge currents, leading to energy-efficient devices. The million-dollar question now is identifying the right materials to generate flows of OAMs, a prerequisite for orbitronics. 

Monopoles of orbital angular momentum (OAM) are a tantalising prospect for orbitronics because OAM is uniform in all directions. This would mean that information flows could be generated in any direction.

Now an international research team led by scientists from Paul Scherrer Institute PSI and Max Planck Institutes in Halle and Dresden in Germany have shown that chiral topological semi-metals, a new class of materials discovered at PSI in 2019, possess properties that make them a highly practical choice for generating currents of OAMs.

Chiral topological semi-metals: a straightforward solution for orbitronics

In the search for suitable materials for orbitronics, steps forward have already been made using conventional materials such as titanium. Yet since their discovery five years ago, chiral topological semi-metals have become an intriguing contender. These materials possess a helical atomic structure, which gives a natural ‘handedness’ like the DNA double helix and could naturally endow them with patterns or textures of OAM that enable its flow.

“This offers a significant advantage to other materials because you don’t need to apply external stimuli to get OAM textures – they’re an intrinsic property of the material,” explains Michael Schüler, group leader in the Center for Scientific Computing, Theory and Data at PSI, and assistant professor of physics at the University of Fribourg, who co-led the recent study. “This could make it easier to create stable and efficient currents of OAM without needing special conditions.”

The attractive but elusive prospect of orbital angular momentum monopoles

There is one particular OAM texture, hypothesised in chiral topological semi-metals, that has captivated researchers: OAM monopoles. At these monopoles, OAM radiates outwards from a centre point like the spikes of a scared hedgehog curled into a ball. 

Why these monopoles are so tantalising is that OAM is uniform in all directions: i.e. it is isotropic. “This is a very useful property as it means flows of OAMs could be generated in any direction,” says Schüler.

Yet despite the attraction of OAM monopoles for orbitronics, until this latest study, they have remained a theoretical dream. 

Hedgehogs hide between theory and experiment

To observe them experimentally, hope has lain with a technique known as Circular Dichroism in Angle-Resolved Photoemission Spectroscopy, or CD-ARPES, using circularly polarised X-rays from a synchrotron light source. Yet a gap between theory and experiment has in the past hindered researchers from interpreting the data. “Researchers may have had the data, but the evidence for OAM monopoles was buried in it,” says Schüler.

In ARPES, light shines on a material, ejecting electrons. The angles and energies of these ejected electrons reveal information on the electronic structure of the material. In CD-ARPES, the incident light is circularly polarised.

“A natural assumption is that if you use circularly polarised light, you are measuring something that is directly proportional to the OAMs,” explains Schüler. “The problem is, as we show in our study, this turns out to be a somewhat naïve assumption. In reality, it’s rather more complex”. 

In chiral topological semi-metals such as PtGa the atoms are arranged in a screw-like structure (left-hand side of the figure). The Ga atoms form a right-handed screw (highlighted atoms on red line), while the Pt atoms form a left-handed screw (highlighted atoms on blue line). In this material, this chiral structure gives rise to special electronic properties: a hedgehog-like distribution of orbital angular momentum of the electrons around high-symmetry points (right-hand side of the figure). This unusual texture of orbital angular momentum was discovered using angle-resolved photoemission experiments with circularly polarized X-ray light. © Michael Schüler

Rigour plugs the gap 

In their study, Schüler and colleagues examined two types of chiral topological semi-metals at the Swiss Light Source SLS: those made of palladium and gallium or platinum and gallium. Determined to reveal the OAM textures hidden within the complex web of CD-ARPES data, the team challenged every assumption with rigorous theory. 

Then they made an unusual, and crucial, extra experimental step of varying the photon energies. “At first, the data didn’t make sense. The signal seemed to be changing all over the place,” says Schüler.

Meticulously unpicking how different contributions complicated calculations of OAM from CD-ARPES data, they revealed that the CD-ARPES signal was not directly proportional to the OAMs, as previously believed, but rotated around the monopoles as the photon energy was changed. In this way, they bridged the gap between theory and experiment and proved the presence of OAM monopoles. 

Doors open to exploring orbital angular momentum textures in new materials

Armed with the ability to accurately visualise OAM monopoles, Schüler and colleagues went on to show that the polarity of the monopole - whether the spikes of OAMs point inwards or outwards - could be reversed by using a crystal with a mirror image chirality. “This is a very useful property, as orbitronics devices could potentially be created with different directionality,” says Schüler.

Now, with theory and experiment finally united, the wider research community are equipped with the means to explore OAM textures across a variety of materials and optimise their applications for orbitronics.

Written By:
Paul Scherrer Institute
Images By:
Michael Schüler, Monika Bletry and PSI
Funded By:
Max Planck Society
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Open access funding provided by Max Planck Society.