Bipolar spin-filtering and giant magnetoresistance effect in spin-semiconducting zigzag graphene nanoribbons
Abstract
Spintronics is one of the main topics in condensed matter physics, in which half-metallicity and giant magnetoresistance are two important objects to achieve. In this work, we study the spin dependent transport properties of zigzag graphene nanoribbons (ZGNR) with asymmetric edge hydrogenation and different magnetic configurations using the non-equilibrium Green's function method combined with density functional calculations. Our results show that when the magnetic configurations of the electrodes change from parallel to antiparallel, the currents in the tunnel junction change substantially, resulting in a high conductance state and a low conductance state, with the tunnel magnetoresistance (TMR) ratio larger than 1 × 105% achieved. In addition, in the parallel magnetic configurations, an ideal bipolar spin filtering effect is observed, making it flexible to switch the spin polarity of current by reversing the bias direction. All these features originate from the spin semiconducting behavior of the asymmetrically hydrogenated ZGNRs. The findings suggest that asymmetric edge hydrogenation provides an important way to construct multi-functional spintronic devices with ZGNRs.