TY - JOUR
T1 - Enhancing intrinsic spin Hall effect
T2 - insights into chiral crystals and topological materials
AU - Dehghan, Ali
AU - Chen, Jiali
AU - Jiang, Wei
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 IOP Publishing Ltd. All rights, including for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies, are reserved.
PY - 2025/7/28
Y1 - 2025/7/28
N2 - This review presents a comprehensive analysis of recent advances in enhancing the intrinsic spin Hall effect (SHE) in emergent quantum materials, including chiral crystals and topological materials, by leveraging their shared symmetry-breaking features and spin-orbit coupling (SOC)-driven phenomena. The SHE, a transformative mechanism for magnetic-field-free charge-to-spin interconversion, lies at the heart of energy-efficient spintronics. Chiral crystals, with their inherent structural handedness and broken inversion symmetry, synergize with topological materials-such as Weyl semimetals and insulators-to amplify SHE through distinct yet complementary mechanisms. These include chiral spin textures, Weyl/Dirac fermions, band-inversion-induced Berry curvature hotspots, and protected surface or hinge states, all governed by strong SOC and unique spin-momentum locking. We systematically analyze how the interplay of symmetry, topology, and electronic structure in these materials creates unprecedented opportunities for SHE enhancement, supported by breakthroughs in computational design (e.g. ab initio Berry curvature engineering) and experimental strategies such as strain, alloying, and heterostructuring. Critical challenges, including the SOC-diffusion length trade-off and the need to harness magnetic or low-symmetry phases, are discussed in the context of material optimization. By unifying insights from chiral and topological systems, this review charts a roadmap for transcending conventional spin current generation paradigms and advancing scalable spintronic technologies.
AB - This review presents a comprehensive analysis of recent advances in enhancing the intrinsic spin Hall effect (SHE) in emergent quantum materials, including chiral crystals and topological materials, by leveraging their shared symmetry-breaking features and spin-orbit coupling (SOC)-driven phenomena. The SHE, a transformative mechanism for magnetic-field-free charge-to-spin interconversion, lies at the heart of energy-efficient spintronics. Chiral crystals, with their inherent structural handedness and broken inversion symmetry, synergize with topological materials-such as Weyl semimetals and insulators-to amplify SHE through distinct yet complementary mechanisms. These include chiral spin textures, Weyl/Dirac fermions, band-inversion-induced Berry curvature hotspots, and protected surface or hinge states, all governed by strong SOC and unique spin-momentum locking. We systematically analyze how the interplay of symmetry, topology, and electronic structure in these materials creates unprecedented opportunities for SHE enhancement, supported by breakthroughs in computational design (e.g. ab initio Berry curvature engineering) and experimental strategies such as strain, alloying, and heterostructuring. Critical challenges, including the SOC-diffusion length trade-off and the need to harness magnetic or low-symmetry phases, are discussed in the context of material optimization. By unifying insights from chiral and topological systems, this review charts a roadmap for transcending conventional spin current generation paradigms and advancing scalable spintronic technologies.
KW - chiral crystals
KW - spin Hall effect
KW - topological materials
UR - http://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105011589475
U2 - 10.1088/1361-648X/adeef0
DO - 10.1088/1361-648X/adeef0
M3 - Review article
C2 - 40645214
AN - SCOPUS:105011589475
SN - 0953-8984
VL - 37
JO - Journal of Physics Condensed Matter
JF - Journal of Physics Condensed Matter
IS - 30
M1 - 303002
ER -