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Current-Induced Torques with Dresselhaus Symmetry Due to Resistance Anisotropy in 2D Materials.

Gregory M StiehlDavid MacNeillNikhil SivadasIsmail El BaggariMarcos H D GuimarãesNeal D ReynoldsLena F KourkoutisCraig J FennieRobert A BuhrmanDaniel C Ralph
Published in: ACS nano (2019)
We report measurements of current-induced torques in heterostructures of Permalloy (Py) with TaTe2, a transition-metal dichalcogenide (TMD) material possessing low crystal symmetry, and observe a torque component with Dresselhaus symmetry. We suggest that the dominant mechanism for this Dresselhaus component is not a spin-orbit torque but rather the Oersted field arising from a component of current that flows perpendicular to the applied voltage due to resistance anisotropy within the TaTe2. This type of transverse current is not present in wires made from a single uniform layer of a material with resistance anisotropy but will result whenever a material with resistance anisotropy is integrated into a heterostructure with materials having different resistivities, thereby producing a spatially nonuniform pattern of current flow. This effect will therefore influence measurements in a wide variety of heterostructures incorporating 2D TMD materials and other materials with low crystal symmetries.
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