Assembling Chiral Materials into Tunnel Junctions
Assembling Chiral Materials into Tunnel Junctions
Chiral-induced spin selectivity (CISS) has emerged as a powerful route to generate spin-polarized
currents without the need for magnetic order, offering a promising platform for future spintronic
applications [1,2]. While conventional spintronic devices rely on a pairs of ferromagnetic electrodes,
integrating chiral molecular materials into tunnel junctions opens new possibilities for designing highly
efficient spin filters and energy-efficient spin–charge conversion architectures. In this talk, I will present
our recent progress on junction devices with lateral π-extended helical nanographenes, which exhibit
strong optical activity and remarkably high spin polarization at room temperature. By combining these
chiral molecular systems with well-established tunnel barrier engineering, we aim to construct solid-
state junctions capable of realizing spintronic functionalities through the CISS effect [3]. We observed
a clear magnetoresistance at room temperature in the tunnel junction devices, which exhibit
unidirectional transport properties. This work builds not only on the successful synthesis of the lateral
chiral molecules [4] but also on our extensive expertise in tunnel junction investigation, established
through recent studies on asymmetric tunnel junctions based on van der Waals antiferromagnetic
CrSBr (Nature 2024 [5]) or low-resistivity metal chromium (Nano Lett. 2023 [6]). I will also introduce the
design strategies for chiral tunnel junctions, the impact of molecular structure on spin-filtering efficiency,
and the outlook of chiral materials tunnel junction devices. This approach paves the way toward next-
generation molecular spintronic devices that combine functionality with scalable solid-state integration.
[1] B. Bloom et al. Chem. Rev. 124(4), 2014
[2] S. Ham et al. Micromachines 15(4), 528, 2024
[3] S. Yang et al., Nat. Rev. Phys. 3, 328, 2021
[4] W. Niu et al. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 63, e202319874, 2024
[5] Y. Chen et al. Nature 632, 1045, 2024
[6] C. Fang et al. Nano Lett. 23, 11485, 2023
Dr. Chi Fang is currently a postdoctoral researcher at the Max Planck Institute of
Microstructure Physics, Germany. He received his Ph.D. in Condensed Matter Physics
from the University of Chinese Academy of Sciences (UCAS) in 2020 and M. S. in
Material Engineering from UCAS in 2017. His research focuses on magnetic tunnel
junction and spin transport in antiferromagnets. Dr. Fang has published more than 30
peer-reviewed papers, which received over 1,700 citations with an h-index of 20
according to Web of Science (WoS).
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Dr. Chi Fang is currently a postdoctoral researcher at the Max Planck Institute of
Microstructure Physics, Germany. He received his Ph.D. in Condensed Matter Physics
from the University of Chinese Academy of Sciences (UCAS) in 2020 and M. S. in
Material Engineering from UCAS in 2017. His research focuses on magnetic tunnel
junction and spin transport in antiferromagnets. Dr. Fang has published more than 30
peer-reviewed papers, which received over 1,700 citations with an h-index of 20
according to Web of Science (WoS).
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| Assembling Chiral Materials into Tunnel Junctions | Seminar given by Chi FANG | 833.65 KiB |